The rhyming conversation between a boy and his dad begins when a naughty chicken follows them home. As the father reads his newspaper, the boy asks, “You know what?” “What?” A turn of the page reveals the rhyming response. Rollicking good kid humor abounds in both the dialogue and the comic illustrations.
Other books by this author
![Chicken Bedtime Is Really Early](/sites/default/files/styles/book_cover_mobile_1x/public/book/0810949261.jpg?itok=e3qkGwle)
Chicken Bedtime Is Really Early
![Chicken Butt's Back](/sites/default/files/styles/book_cover_mobile_1x/public/book/B005FOEULG.jpg?itok=pFKGXIWj)
The rascally child introduced in Chicken Butt returns. Here, he gets his poor mom to say all kinds of rhyming words as he plays with homophones (think: but, butt; bare, bear). Cartoon illustrations add to the humor of the mother-son conversation.
Chicken Butt’s Back
![Dotty](/sites/default/files/styles/book_cover_mobile_1x/public/book/B005DI9YOM.jpg?itok=y68JQYPI)
Dotty
![Ninety-Three in My Family](/sites/default/files/styles/book_cover_mobile_1x/public/book/0810957604.jpg?itok=kdhdU2pc)
Ninety-Three in My Family
![The Capybara Conspiracy: A Novel in Three Acts](/sites/default/files/styles/book_cover_mobile_1x/public/book/0399551719.jpg?itok=jKxcQlDN)
Seventh grader Olive is tired of feeling left out at school because she prefers acting in the drama club rather than playing a sport. Her school is so sports crazy that the principal never acknowledges any of the other clubs during the morning announcements. Olive decides it’s time to take action and embarks on a game plan to ensure that her drama club and other groups at school get the attention they deserve. A perfect book for Readers’ Theater!
The Capybara Conspiracy: A Novel in Three Acts
![Truth or Lie: Sharks!](/sites/default/files/styles/book_cover_mobile_1x/public/book/052557879X.jpg?itok=srJvgtSr)
Truth or Lie: Sharks!
![When Life Gives You O.J.](/sites/default/files/styles/book_cover_mobile_1x/public/book/0375859241.jpg?itok=w-B4UAXP)