The Little Red Pen

by Janet Stevens (Author) Susan Stevens Crummel (Illustrator)

The Little Red Pen
Reading Level: K − 1st Grade
Poor Little Red Pen! She can't possibly correct a mountain of homework all by herself. Who will help her? Not I! says Stapler. Not I! says Eraser. ¡Yo no! says Pushpin, AKA Señorita Chincheta. But when the Little Red Pen tumbles in exhaustion into the Pit of No Return (the trash!), her fellow school supplies must get themselves out of the desk drawer and work together to rescue her. Trouble is, their plan depends on Tank, the rotund class hamster, who's not inclined to cooperate. Will the Little Red Pen be lost forever?

There's no lack of trial and error, hilarious chaos, and creative problem-solving in this mission! Kids--and adults--will never see their school supplies in quite the same way again.
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$17.99

Publishers Weekly

Initially echoing the plot of "The Little Red Hen," sisters and longtime collaborators Stevens and Crummel introduce a bespectacled, schoolmarmish red pen with a stack of papers to grade. Her desk-drawer friends, however, refuse to help, even when the Little Red Pen insists, "If these papers aren't graded, the students won't learn.... The sky might fall. It might be the end of the world!" When the pen, exhausted from grading, falls into the wastebasket--aka "The Pit of No Return"--her friends must rally to rescue her. Stevens's full-bleed illustrations caricature the office supplies in a style reminiscent of Sir John Tenniel, from a bucktoothed Stapler and fuzzy-haired Highlighter to a tiny pushpin, Senorita Chincheta, who makes up for her small size with her emphatic bilingual declarations. But while the story is often verbally clever, with many humorous individual scenes (Stapler's idea of correcting papers is stapling all over the offending paragraph), the convoluted plot and numerous speaking characters (six desk-drawer friends, plus a ruler, yardstick, paperclip box, and a lethargic hamster) make the story as a whole feel overlong and overdone. Ages 6-9. (Apr.)

Copyright 2011 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

School Library Journal

Gr 2-4--In a schoolroom take on this classic tale of cooperation, the teacher's tools pool their energies to solve a problem. The Little Red Pen has fallen into the trash, exhausted after working alone long into the night. The inhabitants of the desk drawer--stapler, pushpin, scissors, highlighter, eraser, pencil, paper clips--each have a lame reason for not helping the pen, but then they realize the error of their ways: if the papers don't get graded, it will be "the end of the world." The rescue isn't easy, but using a little ingenuity and a finally wide-awake classroom hamster, the world doesn't end, the papers get graded, and the friends vow their loyalty for the future. Stevens's enchanting, well-imagined, dimensional cartoon-style drawings of the office-supply characters imbue each one with a distinct personality to match their dialogic voices. That dialogue appears in character-specific fonts against fully illustrated backgrounds and gives the story a cinematic feel. Adults will need Jim Dale's range of voices for a memorable read-aloud, but the ubiquity of graphic novels and resurgence of comics for all age groups assures that young readers will have no trouble following the action. Extend a science lesson on pulleys and levers; stop and start the reading for a lesson on prediction; and pull out your six-traits writing workbooks so students can describe the characters or action. This book is recommended for any classroom and should find a home in most libraries.--Lisa Egly Lehmuller, St. Patrick's Catholic School, Charlotte, NC

Copyright 2011 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes

HELP ME, MR. MUTT! 2010 Texas Bluebonnet Award 
Time Magazine Top Ten Children's Books for 2008
New York Times Bestseller "With tongue firmly in cheek, the dynamic Stevens sisters have crafted a multilayered story that looks at various situations in the life of an average dog.... It's a great read just for fun, and teachers will find a wealth of ways to incorporate it into lessons on letter writing, newspapers, and presenting information through graphs." —School Library Journal "Three licks ("People call it kisses. We call it dessert.") for the Stevens sisters." —Kirkus Reviews, starred review   THE GREAT FUZZ FRENZY "The Stevens sisters prove that there's a lot of mileage to be gained from a wacky premise and some roly-poly prairie dogs.... Stevens's watercolors make heroes of these curious critters. She plunges readers into an animated, earthy underworld, endows her furry cast with winning goofiness and turns the winged symbol of America into a figure of fear." —Pu
Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780152064327
Lexile Measure
510
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Clarion Books
Publication date
April 20, 2011
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV019000 - Juvenile Fiction | Humorous Stories
JUV035000 - Juvenile Fiction | School & Education
Library of Congress categories
Humorous stories
Schools
Pens
Office equipment and supplies
Pennsylvania Young Reader's Choice Award
Nominee 2013 - 2013
Young Hoosier Book Award
Nominee 2014 - 2014
Arkansas Diamond Primary Book Award
Winner 2013 - 2014

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