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    Storm is Coming!

    5.0 5

    by Heather Tekavec, Margaret Spengler (Illustrator)


    Paperback

    (Reprint)

    $6.99
    $6.99

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Customer Reviews

    • ISBN-13: 9780142400708
    • Publisher: Penguin Young Readers Group
    • Publication date: 04/12/2004
    • Edition description: Reprint
    • Pages: 32
    • Product dimensions: 8.00(w) x 10.00(h) x 0.12(d)
    • Lexile: AD200L (what's this?)
    • Age Range: 4 - 8 Years

    Heather Tekavec was born in Manitoba, Canada, but moved at a young age to British Columbia. After graduation, she returned to Manitoba for two years where she got her certificate in Christian Education, then completed her Early Childhood Education in Vancouver, BC. The preschool classroom is where Heather developed a love for children’s books.

    After taking a writing course through the Institute of Children’s Literature, Heather started her writing career with curriculum-based articles for preschool teachers. In 2002, she published her first picture book, Storm is Coming! A follow-up to it, What’s that Awful Smell? came two years later. Both books, published by Dial Books for Young Readers, were selected as IRA-CBC Children’s Choices. Book club and audio rights to the first have recently been bought by Scholastic. She has also written for older children, including her first YA Novel, The Cost of Passage (Herald Press 2004), and short stories for various magazines.

    Heather lives with her husband, her three daughters, and a pet rabbit in Langley, BC. She now works full time at home, but stays connected with children by teaching her daughter’s girl’s club and visiting schools to do author talks.

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    What People are Saying About This

    From the Publisher

    "Tekavec debuts her perfectly pitched read-aloud, accompanied by Spengler's splendid pastel renderings, to create a package that will be used by storytellers, teachers, and most importantly kids, over and over again."-Kirkus Reviews

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    When the old farmer warns that a storm is coming, Dog spreads the word and leads all of the animals to shelter.  Huddled together, they wait anxiously for Storm to come.  But who is this frightening creature named Storm, and what will happen when he arrives?  When the rain starts pelting the roof and lightning fills the sky, the animals are relieved.  The sky must be trying to protect them by scaring Storm away!  But when everything stops and the sky is quiet, the animals hear the  thump, thump of someone coming toward the barn.  Could it be storm?

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    From the Publisher
    "Tekavec debuts her perfectly pitched read-aloud, accompanied by Spengler's splendid pastel renderings, to create a package that will be used by storytellers, teachers, and most importantly kids, over and over again."-Kirkus Reviews
    Publishers Weekly
    When a white-bearded farmer announces, "Storm is coming!", Dog panics and warns the other farm animals, who wonder "who is Storm?... He must b-e-e-e very sca-a-a-ry!" PW said, "The author wisely leaves it to readers to point out the animals' faulty logic, while the artwork conveys the sense of emergency but alleviates the fright." Ages 4-up. (Apr.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
    Children's Literature
    A faithful dog heeds the farmer's warning "storm is coming" and herds the animals to safety in the barn. Trembling in fear, the duck, sheep, and cows await the arrival of the scary, frightening thing. Only cat, disturbed from her slumber by her anxious companions, seems oblivious to the advancing menace. From his perch at the open window, duck reports on the darkening sky, howling wind, hammering rain and flashing lightening. Each report calms and soothes the animals, who are convinced that sky is doing its best to frighten storm away. At last, when all is quiet, cat awakes from her nap and to her inquiry as to whether she missed the storm, the dog gleefully reports, "Storm never came." Bold, expressive pastels fill the pages and convey the tension within the barn and the drama outside. Children will giggle with a satisfied smugness at the animals' foolishness. This is a great story time selection. 2002, Dial,
    — Beverley Fahey
    School Library Journal
    PreS-Gr 1-"Storm is coming!" the old farmer bellows to Dog and in cumulative style, Dog warns the sheep who warn Duck who tells the cows. Huddled in the barn, the frightened animals inform Cat of the news. Laconically, Cat asks "And who is Storm?" which sets young readers up for the personification that follows. The lookout Duck reports that it's getting dark but Dog points out that dark is good because Storm can't find them. The wind will blow Storm away, the rain will camouflage the animal tracks, and lightning and thunder will scare him for sure. Since Storm never comes, Cat can go back to sleep. Spengler's pleasantly rounded cartoon creatures, rendered in cheerfully colored pastels, look appropriately concerned but clueless in contrast to the unflappable cat, and the farmer obviously loves his animals. It's a reassuring story for young listeners anxiously awaiting a storm and a good tale for those who are beyond all that and can laugh at the animals' silly misunderstandings.-Susan Hepler, Burgundy Farm Country Day School, Alexandria, VA Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
    Kirkus Reviews
    A clever suspense story for very young children also gently shows them the face(s) of silly fears. When Farmer hears a storm is coming, he tells dog to call the animals into the barn. Once gathered there, all the noise wakes up Cat, who, upon being told "STORM IS COMING!," asks, "And who is Storm?" No one, not dog, not duck, not cows, knows who Storm is, but the weather outside is getting ominous, and the frightened animals hope it will help hide them. Watching and listening, they get increasingly nervous, but are able to find solace in each other until the sun comes back out and so, therefore, they can too, believing Storm never has arrived. The well-paced text told from the animals' point of view builds suspense, but even younger children will feel "in the know," understanding how the fear factor comes from just a little ignorance of a word everyone should know, and they will enjoy the inside (the barn) joke. The softened effects, bright colors, and perspective of the drawings reinforce and enhance the story in a blazingly seamless design. While the story does its suspenseful work, the comforted young reader sees the storm through windows along with the animals. Tekavec debuts her perfectly pitched read-aloud, replete with sheep's bleating stutters, accompanied by Spengler's (Clickety Clack, 1999) splendid (and somewhat goofy) pastel renderings, to create a package that will be used by storytellers, teachers, and most importantly kids, over and over again. (Picture book. 4-7)

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