Description
At Seabreezy Library, things were just right. / Booklovers were cozy. The sky was blue-bright / when--Shiver me timbers!--through Seabreezy's door / stormed big Pirate Pete and his parrot, Igor! Argh!! Things are looking--and smelling!!--a little fishy at Seabreezy Library. When the big X on Pirate Pete's treasure map leads him and his parrot-sidekick Igor to believe buried treasure is hidden at the library, the patrons are quaking in their shoes. But never fear! Library Lou, Seabreezy's librarian-extraordinaire, is as cool as a cucumber and knows how to handle an irate pirate or two. She knows exactly where the treasure is buried. But first she needs to help Pirate Pete and Igor get a handle on their hygiene, brush up on library etiquette, and then tackle learning their letters. And that will lead them to the treasure that can always be found at the library.
2016 Kansas Reading Association’s Bill Martin, Jr. Picture Book Award
2014 Story Telling World Resource Award - Pre-Adolescent Listeners
2014-2105 Florida Reading Association's Children's Book Award Children's Choice
2014 IRA/CBC Children's Choices List
2014 Bank Street Best Books of the Year for Children
Creative Child Award Preferred Choice Award
A librarian endows a treasure-hunting pirate with reading skills as well as training him to hush up in this bland valentine to literacy.
Sending other users fleeing from their computer screens and cozy reading nooks to cower in the stacks, Big Pirate Pete bursts into the Seabreezy Library bellowing demands for treasure. Flashing the fierce, quelling glare that good public and school librarians everywhere wield, diminutive Library Lou shuts him up and sends him away with a promise to help after he bathes and changes his undershorts. When he meekly returns, she shows him that there’s more to the alphabet than “X marks the spot,” and in time, he becomes an avid reader—as Greene puts it in a typically lumbering couplet: “Those factual books, Big Pete came to love. / He read about things that he’d never heard of….” Ajhar tracks the development of this Common Core–friendly reading preference in comical scenes in which schoolmarmish Lou dances balletically among piles of books as the exaggeratedly humongous pirate grows more and more absorbed in his reading. At last he figures out that reading is fun and tenders his thanks: “ ‘ ’Cause of ye, now we know—books be the treasure!’ / ‘Shucks,’ whispered Lou. ‘It’s been my pleasure.’ ”
Worthy, even trendy, but unlikely to make nonreaders (of any age) follow the animals in Judy Sierra and Marc Brown’s classic to become Wild About Books (2004). (Picture book. 6-8)
Details
Author: |
Rhonda Gowler Greene |
Interest Level Low: |
Age 6 |
Interest Level High: |
Age 8 |
Reading Level: |
Age 6 |
ATOS Reading Level Low: |
2.4 |
ATOS Reading Level High: |
2.4 |
Language: |
English |
Copyright: |
2014 |
Number of Pages: |
40 Per Title |
Teaching Guide: |
No |
Set: |
No |
Award Winner: |
Yes |
Binding Type: |
Hardcover |