Six little sticks

Tiffany Stone, 1967-

Book - 2025

"Meet Mama stick bug and her six little sticks. Mama's going to teach them how to hide so six little sticks stay safe outside. But when Mama counts her little ones, she can find only five. When she tries again, there are just four. Each time Mama counts, one more stick bug is gone! It seems the six little sticks are already experts at hide-and-seek. Can you help Mama spot them?"

Saved in:

Children's Room New Shelf Show me where

jE/Stone
0 / 2 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room New Shelf jE/Stone (NEW SHELF) Due Dec 27, 2025
Children's Room New Shelf jE/Stone (NEW SHELF) Due Dec 29, 2025
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Readers are tasked with locating Mama stick bug's six children. The book opens with a spread depicting Mama on a branch; a page turn reveals her offspring, numbered one through six. They're already a bit hard to distinguish, between camouflaging leaves and branches and an assortment of tiny toys, including a pinwheel, crayons, and a scooter. "Mama's going to teach them how to hide so six little sticks stay safe outside." By the next page, five of the stick bugs are riding Mama's back, but one is already missing. Mama keeps losing her children, but observant viewers will find them, although it may take some time to spot the little critters blending into the woods. Other insects will become visible as children investigate the illustrator's delicate, playful multimedia images. This is a book to peer at closely and won't make for an effective group read-aloud. While the rhyming text is appropriate for very young listeners, the pictures are meant for kids who can really concentrate. Sometimes, only the bugs' heads are visible, and when "friends and cousins" come to join the game of hide-and-seek, only the most able bug detectives will track them all down. Still, those up for the task will have a field day. Facts about the bugs and a final challenge to search for other bugs will send kids back to the book and out into nature. Eagle-eyed junior entomologists will go buggy for this one.(Picture book. 4-9) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.