Book Descriptions
for The Chicken of the Family by Mary Amato and Delphine Durand
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Henrietta doesn’t want to believe it when her two older sisters tell her she’s really a chicken. Still, she is worried. “I am not a chicken. I am not a chicken,” she chants to fall asleep that night. The next morning, however, there’s an egg in her bed and two stray feathers on the floor. Feeling like she doesn’t fit in with her family anymore, Henrietta heads off to nearby Barney’s farm. Soon she’s hopping, flapping, and strutting happily with all the hens. When her sisters try to avoid punishment by admitting it was all a joke and urging Henrietta to come home, the joke is on them. Henrietta likes being a chicken and would just as soon stay on the farm—the hens are much nicer than her sisters. “Always got room for another free-ranger,” says farmer Barney. Mary Amato’s fresh and funny take on sibling dynamics is buoyed by lively details and perfectly paired with Delphine Durand’s comical illustrations. Highly Commended, 2009 Charlotte Zolotow Award (Ages 4–7)
CCBC Choices 2009. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2009. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
Henrietta's two older sisters love to tease her. When they try to convince her that she's actually a chicken instead of a little girl, it's pretty hard to believe at first. But the evidence is all there: her legs are kind of yellow, and her toes are kind of long. The feathers she finds beside her bed the next morning settle it, and Henrietta heads off to the farm to find her real family.
The chickens welcome her with open wings, and this lovably gullible heroine's joyful acceptance of who she really is will have readers squawking with laughter.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.