Dig, Wait, Listen: A Desert Toad's Tale

by April Pulley Sayre (Author) Barbara Bash (Illustrator)

Reading Level: K − 1st Grade

The desert Southwest 
is full of sounds.

Skitter, skitter, scratch. 
A scorpion is crawling. 
Pop, pop, pop. 
kangaroo rat is hopping. 
Tsk, tsk, tsk. 
A rattlesnake is 
shaking its tail.

But the spadefoot toad 
is quiet in her 
underground burrow, 
listening for one sound 
in particular... 
What is that sound? 
And what will the 
spadefoot toad do 
when she hears it?

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School Library Journal

PreS-Gr 2-Under the sand, a spadefoot toad waits for the sound of rain. She remains in her burrow as creatures, including peccaries, a rattlesnake, and a kangaroo rat, pass above her but finally emerges to lay her eggs when the distinctive patter of rain begins. Clear, often lovely watercolors illustrate the creature's wait, the desert animals, and the brief time the toad and tadpoles spend on the desert floor after the rain. The nature lesson is propelled by frequent sound effects and the palpable need for rain. Notes at the end give additional information on the habits of this toad and her animal neighbors. Pair this title with Lynn Stone's Desert Animals at Night (Rourke, 1997) or Bash's Desert Giant (Little, Brown, 1990) for a look at desert life. Or, compare the spadefoot toad with her flashier amphibian relatives of the rain forest in Joy Cowley's The Red-Eyed Tree Frog (Scholastic, 1999). The only book for children specifically about the spadefoot toad, Sayre's title is a useful and pleasing addition.-Ellen Heath, Orchard School, Ridgewood, NJ Copyright 2001 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
April Pulley Sayre

April Pulley Sayre was from Greenville, South Carolina and grew up endlessly fascinated by the natural world. She was the award-winning author of more than eighty books for young readers, including Woodpecker Wham! and Eat Like a Bear.

Jeff Sayre is an ecologist, entrepreneur, and author with a passion for conservation and natural history. He and April have collaborated on twelve books together, all oriented around their shared love for nature and ecology.

Juliet Menéndez is a Guatemalan American author and illustrator living between Guatemala City, Paris, and New York. While working as a bilingual teacher in New York City's public schools, Juliet noted the need for more books that depicted children like the ones in her classrooms. She studied design and illustration in Paris and now spends her days with her watercolors and notebook.

Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780688166144
Lexile Measure
490
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Greenwillow Books
Publication date
March 20, 2001
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV002120 - Juvenile Fiction | Animals | Frogs & Toads
Library of Congress categories
Toads
Desert animals
Young Hoosier Book Award
Nominee 2005 - 2005

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