Gummytoes
- Publisher
- Fitzhenry and Whiteside
- Initial publish date
- Oct 2004
- Subjects
- General, Frogs & Toads, General
Library Ordering Options
Description
Gummytoes is a beautiful tree frog. But he's tired of blending into the background. He wants to be seen and admired. So one day he leaps right up to a group of children and lets out a CHIRP. The children are impressed. When the tree frog uses his sticky toes to climb their glass jar, the children are amazed. When Gummytoes snatches bugs out of the air with his long tongue, the children are astonished. Now the tree frog is the center of attention, and he loves it. But the children are so pleased with Gummytoes that they scoop up the little tree frog, pop him into the jar and take him home to their terrarium. They squeal when he chirps and thump on the glass when he climbs. Poor Gummytoes is miserable. He misses his quiet home. He doesn't want attention any more. What can a little tree frog do?
But there are lots of things that tree frogs can do, and Gummytoes is about to use all his talents to finally escape notice and find a way home.
About the author
Sean Cassidy has written and illustrated a number of titles, including Wake up, Henry Rooster, Gummytoes, a Blue Spruce Award nominee, and Good to be Small, which won the Mr. Christie's Book Award Silver Seal. The Chicken Cat, which marked his debut as a picture book illustrator won both the Mr. Christie's Book Award Gold Seal and the Ruth Schwartz Award. Sean lives near Orangeville, Ontario.
Editorial Reviews
"Sean Cassidy paints as disarmingly well as he writes. A winning amalgam of picture book and science primer�"
— The Globe and Mail
"Sean Cassidy has combined a lesson with facts and created a wonderful story with bright pictures that children will want to read again and again."
— Resource Links
"Gummytoes is a visual delight. From a frog's eye view, the world is lush with soft hues and keen detail. And as for Gummytoes himself, you've never seen such an expressive, sweet-faced frog in your life."
— In the Hills, Winter 2004