She’s baaaack…just in time for holiday hijinks.
Chicken and Papa are off to the ballet. Although Chicken has her tutu and ballet shoes with her, when Papa asks if she’ll interrupt the performance, she promises to behave. Readers familiar with Stein’s previous Chicken stories won’t believe her for a moment. In short order, she interrupts The Nutcracker three times: to show Clara her tutu, to stop Fritz from bullying poor Clara, and to save the Nutcracker from the Mouse King’s sword. Each interruption startles performers, annoys audience members, and mortifies poor Papa—while also inviting readers to laugh at Chicken’s slapstick, well-intentioned shenanigans, enhanced by clever visual gags in the multimedia illustrations. A fourth and final interruption occurs after Chicken and Papa are kicked out, and Chicken absconds with the Nutcracker, which Papa says she must return so the show can conclude. Here enters the book-within-a-book conceit from prior Chicken stories as she gives the narrator onstage a new script to read, explaining how the Nutcracker returns to Clara. Stein’s metafictive narrative is sidesplittingly funny, capturing with aplomb young children’s endearingly exasperating tendency to speak up when it’s least convenient. Post-show comments from the audience (“What a great show!” “I’ve never seen a Nutcracker like that!”) will doubtlessly be echoed by those reading this book, the series’ most successful offering since its original 2011 Caldecott Honor title. The human performers vary in skin tone.
Interrupt your holiday hustle-bustle for this delightful read.
(game) (Picture book. 3-7)