Whanganuilibrary.com
Syndetics cover image
Image from Syndetics

Musical Mac / by Brendan Kearney.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York: Sterling Children's Books, [2019]Description: 1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 27 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781454933700
  • 1454933704
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Summary: Mac the millipede has lots and lots of arms and legs--which are useful for many things, but especially for making music. He dreams of playing in the Soggy Bog Talent Show with a band, but wherever he auditions, everyone says NO. No one wants him . . . until Mac comes up with an ingenious, satisfying one-millipede solution to his problem!
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Childrens Picture Books Mobile Library Children's Picture Books Children's Picture Books KEAR Available T00826300
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

When a millipede can't find a band to join, he finds a way to make his own special kind of music!



" . . . richly detailed artwork, colorful characters, and strong narrative will make for an enjoyable, musically oriented storytime." --Booklist Online



Mac the millipede has lots and lots of arms and legs--which are useful for many things, but especially for making music. He dreams of playing in the Soggy Bog Talent Show with a band, but wherever he auditions, everyone says NO. No one wants him . . . until Mac comes up with an ingenious, satisfying one-millipede solution to his problem! Brendan Kearney's funny, charming picture book will inspire all kids who like to march to the beat of their own drum.

Mac the millipede has lots and lots of arms and legs--which are useful for many things, but especially for making music. He dreams of playing in the Soggy Bog Talent Show with a band, but wherever he auditions, everyone says NO. No one wants him . . . until Mac comes up with an ingenious, satisfying one-millipede solution to his problem!

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Booklist Review

Mac is a musically gifted millipede, and as the Soggy Bog Talent Show approaches, being too shy for a solo performance, he packs his instruments and goes out in search of a band. After attempting to join an insect orchestra, an alley cat jazz group, and a barbershop quartet of birds, he ends up running for his life from the avian predators, finally escaping through a crowd and onto the talent show stage. There, with the use of his many appendages and the support of new friends in the audience, Mac finds the courage to perform alone. Kearney tells a classic tale of the outsider trying to find his place in the world, and while Mac is an endearingly rendered character, the reasons for his rejections being too big, being too small, or wearing the wrong outfit may not connect on a deeper level. Still, the richly detailed artwork, colorful characters, and strong narrative will make for an enjoyable, musically oriented storytime.--Ronny Khuri Copyright 2019 Booklist

Kirkus Book Review

A talented bug wants to play music but is nervous about taking the stage solo.To compete in the Soggy Bog Talent Show, Mac the millipede decides to join a band. He grabs his many instruments in his many, many hands and heads out. Mac joins in with each rehearsing group he finds, playing violin with a tiny, antennaed orchestra, blowing his trumpet with some alley cats, and crooning with a bird a cappella group, among others. Each group's spokesanimal compliments his talents but dismisses the prospective musician. The birds even try to eat him! They scare Mac so much that he runs all the way onto the talent show stagealone. Then all "his new friends" in the audiencethe bands he's recently metcall out for him to play a different instrument (and "Sorry for trying to eat you!" yells one bird). Mac breathes deeply, then starts playing every instrument at once, embracing his (reader-anticipated) calling to be "his very own ONE MAN BAND!" The text incorporates some playful elements, including some internal rhyme and sequential panels, although its simple story with predictable plot turns provides little beyond the first read-through. All the animal characters, even mammals, are bug-eyed, rendered in saturated colors and placed against detailed backgrounds that provide some visual fodder.A cohesive chord that nevertheless rings hollow. (Picture book. 4-6) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Powered by Koha