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  1 Bully
Author: Seeger, Laura Vaccaro
 
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Class: Easy
Age: 3-6
Language: English
Descriptors: Picture Book
LC: PZ7
Grade: P-1
Print Run: 50000
ISBN-13: 9781596436305
LCCN: 2012012991
Imprint: Roaring Brook Press
Pub Date: 07/16/2013
Availability: Out of Print Confirmed
List: $18.99
  Hardcover Reinforced
Physical Description: 1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 22 x 27 cm. H 10.42", W 8.25", D 0.38", 0.81 lbs.
LC Series:
Brodart Sources: Brodart's For Youth Interest: Popular
Brodart's Fresh Reads for Kids TIPS Selections
Brodart's Insight Catalog: Children
Brodart's TOP Juvenile Titles
Bibliographies: Children's Core Collection, 22nd ed.
Children's Core Collection, 23rd ed.
Children's Core Collection, 24th ed.
Awards: Booklist Starred Reviews
Cooperative Children's Book Center Choices
Horn Book Guide Titles, Rated 1 - 4
Notable Children's Books, ALA
Notable Social Studies Trade Books for Young People
Publishers Weekly Starred Reviews
School Library Journal Starred Reviews
Starred Reviews: Booklist
Publishers Weekly
School Library Journal
TIPS Subjects: Pets/Domestic Animals
Behavior
BISAC Subjects: JUVENILE FICTION / Social Themes / Bullying
JUVENILE FICTION / Animals / Farm Animals
LC Subjects: Bullies and bullying, Fiction
Bullies, Fiction
Bulls, Fiction
Domestic animals, Fiction
SEARS Subjects: Bullies, Fiction
Bulls, Fiction
Domestic animals, Fiction
Reading Programs:
 
Annotations
Brodart's TOP Juvenile Titles | 08/01/2013
Bully can't find a nice thing to say to any of his animal friends. Calling them names and insulting them is all he's ever known. How can they convince the little bull that it's no fun being a bully? 40pp., Color Ill.
Starred Reviews:
Booklist | 05/15/2013
Preschool-Grade 3. After a big bull tells him to go away, a little bull looks hurt and dejected. When a friendly rabbit, chicken, and turtle ask him if he wants to play, to each smaller animal, he bellows his answer (NO!). He grows larger (CHICKEN!), and LARGER (SLOWPOKE!) with each name he calls. After seven name-calling episodes, he has grown so enormous that only his hoof fits in the picture book. The tables are turned when a goat yells BULLY! Bully? asks the bull, looking hurt and insecure. Suddenly deflated, he apologizes to his friends and asks, Wanna play? Bold black lines and flat colors define the images of the animals, which stand out against the textured, ivory-toned backgrounds. Delivered in speech balloons, the only text is terse dialogue delivered in a font that grows larger as the bull roars louder. His ego deflates in an amusing, cartoonlike scene, showing him spinning like a punctured balloon. Perhaps the most unusual aspect of the book is the consideration of the bully's point of view. Intelligently conceived and beautifully executed, this picture book is visually and verbally pared down to essentials, making it accessible to a wide age range. Yet for all its simplicity, this story opens up a number of complex issues for discussion. Phelan, Carolyn. 40p. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2013.
Publishers Weekly | 04/29/2013
Ages 3-7. Seeger (Green) uses boldly inked barnyard animals to tell her story about bullying, casting a bull in the title role. The trouble starts when the young bull is rejected by an older one: "Go away!" it shouts. The young bull is shaken, but he's learned something--how to hurt others. When a rabbit, chicken, and turtle in the barnyard ask him to play, he grumps "No," then hurls insults at them, names that are no more than the literal truth. "Chicken!" he yells at the chicken, who jumps in the air. "Slowpoke!" he shouts at the turtle. "You stink!" he screams at a skunk. The more he abuses the others, the larger he grows, his angry bluster feeding his self-importance. At last a goat speaks truth to power: "Bully!" the goat cries. "Bully?" the bull repeats to himself. All the inflated air blows out of him, and he tosses and tumbles across a spread like a balloon let loose. Tearfully, he makes peace. Seeger's pages pop with action, and the lesson couldn't be clearer. Agent: Steven Malk, Writers House. (July). 40p. PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2013.
School Library Journal | 07/01/2013
PreS-Gr 2. On the cover, bold black lines on an angry tomato-red background depict the scowling title character. Seeger sets the emotional tone from the very start: this is one mean bull. Front endpapers offer a clue to his behavior as readers see a larger, adult bull shout, "Go away!" The rejected little guy hangs his head, and, as many real-life bullies do, turns his hurt into anger. When he comes upon a group of animals who want to play, he puffs himself up in a near-identical pose to his adult counterpart and shouts, "No!" He proceeds to insult them with literal names ("CHICKEN!" "PIG!") that lend a bit of levity and humor to an otherwise serious story. With each insult, the bull's bravado makes him larger and larger, filling and then expanding outside the frame of the pages. Children will recognize and respond to this powerful visual depiction of rage. By the time he yells "YOU STINK!" at the skunk, only his two giant front hooves and enormous snout are visible. When the bull is finally forced to confront what he has become, viewers see him deflate like an overinflated balloon and become small. Again, Seeger lightens the mood with this touch of cartoon whimsy. Spare text and simple drawings allow the antibullying message to come across clearly without being heavy-handed or didactic. The arc of the bull's experience engenders discussion and encourages the quest for satisfying solutions. Kiera Parrott, Darien Library, CT. 40p. SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2013.
Journal Reviews
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books | 09/01/2013
R. 3-6 yrs. The opening pages give the briefest of backstories for this literal "bull-y," as a brown bull slinks away after being rejected by a bigger bull. When approached with an offer to play by some smaller critters, the brown bull lashes out in turn: he yells "CHICKEN!" at the chicken and "SLOW POKE!" at the turtle, tells the bee to "BUZZ OFF!" and informs the skunk, "YOU STINK!" With each nasty shout, the bull and his words grow larger in size on the page until only one hoof and the edge of his face are visible. When he hollers "BUTT OUT!" at the goat, the goat sets him straight, huffing "BULLY!" at the bull before marching off. This retort causes the bull to regroup-and to shrink in size-until, prostrate on the ground, he offers a tearful "Sorry . . .Wanna play?" to his friends, who respond with "OK," and the animals head off together happily. Though oversimplified (and overhopeful), the story is also very age-appropriate, and the way the bull's increasing size mirrors his increasingly rude posturing makes the power aspect of bullying concrete for a young audience. The illustrations use simple compositions with smooth, basic colors filling thickly lined figures and minimal background (beige with a handcrafted paper texture and a simple gray fence), keeping the focus staunchly on the words and actions of the bull. Adults, and some kids, may think the bull's friends let him off too easily, but the breakdown of the lesson into its simplest elements (anger, apology, forgiveness) may make it a useful template for young children navigating the tricky territory where emotions and relationships intersect. This will be a valuable discussion tool for families, schools, and libraries. JH. 40p. THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE UNIV. OF ILLINOIS, c2013.
Horn Book | 07/01/2013
Preschool. Showing that she can be just as clever with words as she is with images, Seeger takes on name-calling in this barnyard drama. The action begins before the title page with a large gray bull telling a little brown bull to "GO AWAY!"; with a page turn, we see the dejected little brown bull making his way across the title page. When he comes across other animals in the yard who ask him to play, he calls them names: "CHICKEN!" "SLOW POKE!" "PIG!" We can see from each animal's reaction that the names hurt, in spite of the fact that each name the bull uses is based on the species' actual name or a defining characteristic. We can also see that the bull seems to grow in stature with each pejorative he shouts, as if the belittling is literal. When a billy goat comes back with a disparaging name for the bull -- "BULLY!" -- it hurts his feelings so much that it brings him right back down to size, and he makes a tearful apology. The complete narrative appears in dialogue bubbles in quick bursts of one or two syllables, and the pictures tell the rest of the story by showing only the animal characters and the barnyard fence drawn in thick lines and in flat colors on textured rice paper. Perfect for the preschool set, the book is deceptively simple at first glance, but, as with name-calling itself, there is a lot going on beneath the surface. kathleen t. horning. 40pg. THE HORN BOOK, c2013.
Horn Book Guide | 05/01/2014
2. In this barnyard drama, a large bull tells a little bull to GO AWAY! When other animals ask the little bull to play, he calls them names: CHICKEN! SLOW POKE! PIG! In Seeger's barnyard drama, the narrative appears in dialogue bubbles, and the pictures, drawn in thick lines and in flat colors on textured rice paper, fill in the rest of the story. kth. 40pg. THE HORN BOOK, c2014.
Kirkus Reviews | 06/15/2013
Characteristically impeccable design distinguishes Seeger's latest, even as pacing risks its overall success. The cover's bold, red background emphasizes a brown bull's surly expression--he's seeing red emotionally as surely as readers see it behind him. But then, the frontispiece shows him looking downright cowed as a large, gray bull shouts, "GO AWAY!" Clearly pained, the brown bull roundly rejects a group of animals that invites him to play. Wordplay makes his cruel remarks pack a wallop: "CHICKEN!" he shouts at a hen; "SLOW POKE!" at a turtle; "PIG!" at, well, a pig. A bee and skunk feel his ire, too. Then, a goat evoking the bravery of the Billy Goats Gruff facing down the troll retorts, "BULLY!" "Bully?" the brown bull asks in a picture employing an effective direct gaze at readers. On the next spread, the bull is depicted multiple times, sent into a physical tailspin representing his emotional upheaval. He apologizes on the antepenultimate page, and then, over just two spreads, he invites the animals to play, and they accept. This resolution arrives a bit too quickly, and questions linger about the gray bull, bee, skunk and the heroic goat. Perhaps, then, this book is best a conversation starter about bullying rather than a fully developed story or commentary on this pressing social issue. (Picture book. 5-8). 40pg. KIRKUS MEDIA LLC, c2013.
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