Showing posts with label Trucks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trucks. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 30, 2024

The Truck Cat by Deborah Frenkel illustrated by Danny Snell


Yacoub lives in his truck. He drives huge distances carrying many different things. English is not his first language, and he sometimes finds it difficult to talk to the other truck drivers he meets along the way but luckily Yacoub has his little cat named Tinka. Tinka keeps Yacoub company on long journeys and under the stars at night. But then one day Tinka is distracted by a fluttering butterfly, and he accidentally leaves Yacoub behind. Luckily Tinka is rescued by a kind young woman named Mari. Tinka is happy living in htis new place and he enjoys her bakery and the fresh fish she feeds him but he is also worried about his friend. Will Tinka and Yacoub ever be reunited?

Here is the web site for Deborah Frenkel. I previously talked about this book:



Here is an interview with Justkidslit where Deborah Frenkel talks about The Truck Cat.

Here is the web site for Danny Snell

Blurb from the teachers notes (via Pegi Williams): Tinka is a truck cat, travelling the open roads of Australia with Yacoub in his truck. Yacoub doesn’t know many other people, but he and Tinka always have each other. Until one day, Tinka gets distracted chasing a white butterfly and ends up on a busy main road, with cars and trucks separating him from Yacoub. Luckily, Tinka is saved by a kind-hearted baker, Mari, who takes him into her home and her life and feeds him. But Tinka always worries about Yacoub, out there in the silence. Yacoub worries about Tinka too, missing the companionship of his friend … until one day, a smell draws him to the window of a bakery, where a familiar face waits for him.

By chance I borrowed The Truck Cat from the library this week and then today I saw it was announced as the 2025 National Simultaneous Storytime book which is on May 22nd, 2025 at 12:00pm AEST

About National Simultaneous Storytime: by facilitating NSS we aim to: 

  • promote the value of reading and literacy, 
  • promote the value and fun of books,
  • promote an Australian writer and publisher, 
  • celebrate and promote storytime activities in public libraries, school libraries, classrooms and communities around the country,
  • and provide opportunities to involve parents, caregivers, the media, and others to participate in and enjoy the occasion.

What do we look for in the National Simultaneous Storytime book?

Each year interested publishers send in possible titles. From a practical perspective, the publisher has to be able and willing to provide copyright release for use of the illustrations, book projection, translation into other languages and performance. The publisher also needs to commit to a special print run of several thousand copies. This narrows down the options. The criteria for choosing from the remaining books include: 

  • a positive storyline
  • appeal to a modern and diverse audience
  • suitability for read-aloud (language and length)
  • how well the book lends itself to craft and other activities
I was very interested to read the criteria because I had (wrongly) assumed that since (in the past) Scholastic Australia were sponsors of this event the book had to be a Scholastic Australia publication. I am pleased to see I was wrong. The book this year comes from Bright Light which an imprint of Hardie Grant Children's Publishing.




Things to talk about and discuss after reading The Truck Cat:

How do you know the setting for this story is in Australia?

Do you think Yacoub has always been a truck driver? What does it mean 'to make a living'? 

How do you know Yacoub has not always lived in Australia? 

Why is Yacoub thinking about 'the old country'? What does this phrase mean?

Think about the sentence "Until cool hands lifted him from the road, held him gently, and carried him to a car." How does the meaning of this change if you alter the words 'cool' and 'gently'. What emotions do you feel when Mari rescues Tinka.

Tinka cannot tell Mari that he is worried about Yacoub but what might he say if he could talk?

When do we get the first hint that there might be a cultural connection between Mari and Yacoub?

How does Deborah Frenkel give her story a perfect sense of completion? 

The final pages show changes to the lives of Mari and Yacoub - what has happened? Talk about the way Danny Snell has extended the text well beyond the words of the story. How has 'home' now changed for Yacoub?

Discuss the vocab from the book - interloper, mewing, lunged, daintiest, depots, tri-axle, rafters

Older students - read the end notes from the author and research refugees from WWII who settled in Australia. Find other picture books about the modern refugee experience. Here is my Pinterest with some books that are sure to be in your school library

Research Polish cakes and biscuits. Check if your family have favourite recipes from other cultures.

Yacoub calls his grandmother Nena. What do you call your grandparents?

Book design - note the changes to the end papers; the consistent colour palette used in the water colour illustrations; the use of framing as a way to sequence the plot.

How does Danny Snell show movement of Tinka and also of the traffic in his illustrations?

A similar thing happens on the page where the truck is carrying eggs - how do we know the truck is moving slowly so the eggs don't get scrambled?

Narrative devices - repeated structures - some cats are house cats, some are apartment cats, some cats live on farms, some live this the city. AND at the end sometimes he's a bakery cat, sometimes a sofa cat; sometimes he's a picnic cat and sometimes a train cat.

What device is Deborah Frenkel using with these phrases - brick motels with beetles in the bathtub; rest-stop huts with rats in the rafters; depots dancing with dragonflies; lorikeets landed in the lemon tree; pigeons pecked in the petunias.

You could make a library display of past NSS titles and even have a mini readathon in your classroom exploring all of these terrific Australian Picture Books.



If you can't read all of these try to find Arthur by Amanda Graham; Edward the Emu by Sheena Knowles; The Wrong book by Nick Bland; Too many elephants in this house by Ursula Dubosarsky; and Mrs Wilkinson's Chooks by Leona Peguero. 


Thursday, May 2, 2024

Big Truck Little Island by Chris van Dusen

"Out on the ocean, one bright summer day,
bound for an island, still five miles away,
a tugboat was towing a truck on a barge-
a truck that was hauling a load, extra large."

Told in verse, the narrative, which seems at first to simply be about a truck’s glacial journey to its destination, turns out to be an excellent lesson in kindness and problem-solving. Kirkus Star review

A huge truck (we might call this a B Double here in Australia) arrives on a small island. We cannot see the load because it is covered in a tarp. The roads on the island are narrow and wind around below a small chain of hills. This truck really is way too long to maneuver, and it is not too long before it becomes well and truly stuck. This is the main road on the island - into and out of town. Meg has a swimming lesson, Barry is already late for his ballet class, Pete is working on a school science project with his friend, and Sue really needs to get her dog to the dog wash- he just encountered a skunk! The parents are just frustrated and beginning to grow angry, but the kids can see the solution. Everyone can walk around the side of the truck and swap cars! Oh, great idea - and when the truck is unstuck can we finally discover what it was carrying - yes - but I am not going to spoil this wonderful surprise.

Reading a picture book is such an easy way to introduce new words to your young reading companion or library group. This book has such rich vocabulary - barge, bound, load, hauling, wraps, treacherous, trundled, chugged, oversize load, transected, isle, switchback, payload, battlement frappe, frustration, convened, solution, departed, summoned, revealed, and delight. The other aspect of this if you read through this list, you are sure to see many words that are unlikely to be part of your daily conversation and yet by reading this book look at all the words your child will hear. And this is a story that warrants re-reading so they will hear these words more than once and hopefully some will become part of their own word repertoire. I do love the word switchback! This book will be enjoyed by children aged 6+ especially those who are fascinated by large trucks. And the page with the island landscape is certainly one to linger over. Oh and what a wonderful celebration of community life and the trust we should have in others. 

Van Dusen is in full command of his rhyming text, using rhythm and sound to set the pace and convey mood. His expressive characters add humor to the situation. Horn Book

A perfect little slice of life with a unique take on kindness and compromise. Kirkus Star review

This book is based on a real incident on Vinalhaven island off the coast of Maine. That truck was carrying a wind turbine - there is a photo at the back of the book - you can see it was a very long load. People did swap cars just as they do in this story.

I talked about another Chris van Dusen book recently. This one is also based on a curious true story: