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The persistence of Henrietta, one of 3,333 chickens on a chicken farm, leads to a better life for them all.
The persistence of Henrietta, one of 3,333 chickens on a chicken farm, leads to a better life for them all.
In this eloquent once-upon-a-time, Johansen and Bhend introduce a nonconformist chicken and make a case for the humane treatment of egg-layers. Henrietta is among "three thousand three hundred/ and thirty-three chickens/ who lived in a great, big chicken house..../ almost all of them were losing feathers/ because they pecked at one another/ whenever they stepped/ on each other's feet." Henrietta, an ambitious pullet too young to produce eggs, dreams of a comfortable place where she might fly or lay a golden egg someday. Though her peers scoff ("Don't even bother trying," they cluck), Henrietta "pecked and scratched/ until she had scratched open a hole" in the wall. Three times, she gets outside and leads the others to brief freedom: "There was fresh air everywhere/ and it didn't smell of chicken droppings/ or fortified chicken feed anywhere." Twice, humans recapture the escapees, but on the third try, the workers appeal to their manager: "If we build a great, big chicken yard/ out here in the open.../ it'll all work out." Johansen emphasizes that Henrietta is resourceful and brave "because she [is] so little," and the hopeful resolution resonates with Virginia Lee Burton's Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel. Bhend combines personality-filled portraits of Henrietta with naturalistic illustrations of the grassy outdoors enjoyed by frogs, wrens and ducks. Her stippled and crosshatched ink-line drawings, along with the book's clean design, recall another classic tale of an underdog, The Story of Ferdinand. Ages 4-8. (Mar.) Copyright 2003 Cahners Business Information.
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