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Whose Poo?

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
For fans of Everyone Poops, a hilariously fresh take on POO! A trip to the zoo turns into a very silly discussion about poo, as two siblings wonder what sort of poo each and every creature would do.
One day, Daddy Rat announces to his baby rats that he'll be taking them to the zoo . . . but only if they're good, which means no talking about poo! And yet, before the family can even leave the house, the two rascally siblings can't help but wonder . . . what sort of poo would an astronaut do? Shiny, silver, space-age poo! Rocket-powered, weightless poo, and it spins round and round like a planet does, too!
Head chefs, balloon sellers, blue whales . . . everyone and everything must have a unique poo, and the siblings simply have to stop and imagine each and every one (much to the chagrin of Daddy Rat, who is getting increasingly irritated with all the poo talk). Once the rats finally reach the zoo, things escalate, because of course each and every animal in the zoo must do a special kind of poo! Finally, Daddy Rat has simply had enough, and is forced to sit down and explain the facts to his curious kids. And when he thinks he may have gotten through to his youngsters, he encounters a surprising (and smelly) twist which will have little rats everywhere laughing out loud!
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    • Kirkus

      April 15, 2021
      Two little white mice can't stop wondering what other animals' (including humans') fecal matter looks like. A father mouse is taking his two little mice to the zoo, but only if they promise not to talk about poo. They're barely out the door (which fronts on a child's bedroom) when they notice a poster of an astronaut on the wall and, in whispers, wonder what astronaut waste looks like. "Shiny, silver, space-age poo! / Rocket-powered weightless poo, / and it spins round and round / like a planet does too!" Their guess at a pink poodle's poo? "Tiny, pink, pom-pom poo!" (the same as the lady in the pink, frilly dress walking the poodle). They imagine a gourmet chef would poo on a china plate, and the balloon sculptor's would be "squeaky, bendy, blow-up poo." In the same vein, at the zoo, all their scatological supposition is that each animal's poo is somehow similar to the animal itself (penguin poo is snowman-shaped). Finally, Daddy overhears and shows them what the zoo does with all the poo (fertilize the plants)...so all these supposed differences don't matter. Bird's rhyming text is conveyed entirely in dialogue, and the only real surprise is that it takes Daddy so long to overhear his children. Coppo's paintings have a pleasing matte quality to them, and they rise to the text's challenge in their various renderings of turds, most of which look like brown soft serve ice cream. (The poo in an actual ice cream cone may be too much for weaker constitutions.) Humans depicted are diverse. A manure manifesto for poo-ficionados. (Picture book. 3-6)

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
Kindle restrictions

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:480
  • Text Difficulty:1-2

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