Available:*
Library | Call Number | Status |
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Searching... Monmouth Public Library | HEOS | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Newberg Public Library | DINSOAURS HEOS | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Salem Main Library | JPT DINO Heos | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Salem Main Library | JPT DINO Heos | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Sheridan Public Library | J Red (Heos) | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Silver Falls Library | JP HEOS | Searching... Unknown |
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Summary
Summary
A fun, playful, energetic story starring two stegosauruses and one stego thesaurus about family--and synonyms!--for the young word lover in your home, residence, or abode!
Stegothesaurus's love of language has always put him at odds with his stegosaurus brothers. So when he makes a friend--an allo thesaurus-- who is just as verbose as he, he is happy, thrilled, and ecstatic! But Stegothesaurus soon learns that the allothesaurus has very different ideas about what constitutes a good meal, and he'll discover there's one thing that he loves more than words: his family.
Featuring clever but simple text from Bridget Heos and bold, exuberant art by T. L. McBeth, Stegothesaurus introduces young readers to a memorable, original, unforgettable dinosaur hero.
Author Notes
Bridget Heos is the author of more than sixty nonfiction books for children, including Who Wants to Be a Princess? She lives in Kansas City with her family.
T.L. McBeth is an author and illustrator living and working in New York. His illustrations have been featured on Threadless and displayed at the Society of Illustrators.
Reviews (2)
School Library Journal Review
PreS-Gr 1-This humorous addition to the dinosaur canon has a couple of unexpected twists. There are three dino brothers: two stegosauruses and one stegothesaurus, who uses three synonyms for each of his brothers' words. One day, out jumps an allosaurus, but when stegothesaurus uses his triumvirate of synonyms, instead of eating him, she responds with her own synonyms, as she is an "allothesaurus." They have a lovely day together until he asks how she learned so many words, and it turns out she ate another stegothesaurus. At this, our hero runs back to his brothers for "The Finale The Conclusion The Closing The End." The character of the stegothesaurus is a clever way to include vocabulary, and the concise text moves at a sprightly pace. However, the plot is thin and has the feel of an extended joke. The graphite pencil-and-photoshop illustrations have a simple, graphic, cartoony look, reminiscent of the works of Mo Willems and Greg Pizzoli, complete with a limited palette of peachy oranges and minty greens. The dinos all have large oval eyes with black oval pupils, as well as peach ovals for cheeks, giving them an appealing, if slightly odd, look. The backgrounds are also spare, and everything has heavy black outlines. While the humor will likely appeal to preschoolers and kindergartners, and the idea is clever, on the whole the final product is slight. -VERDICT A fun read-aloud and a solid addition where demand for vocabulary building, dinosaur books, or humor is high.-Amy Lilien-Harper, The Ferguson Library, Stamford, CT © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
When a stegothesaurus meets an allothesaurus, the results can be dicey, hazardous, problematical.Unlike his mostly monosyllabic kin, Stegothesaurus relishes words as well as shrubberynot just "Yummy," but "Savory, succulent, scrumptious." So it is that when a predator attacks he can't gallop off until he comes up with a suitable "F-f-f-frightening, formidable, fearsome." To his amazement, his toothy adversary responds, "Hulking, hefty, humongous." Yes, she's not a common allosaurus but an "allothesaurus" and seemingly a kindred soul. In the very simply drawn cartoon scenes, McBeth pins bow ties on the prehistoric pedants (the allothesaurus has dainty eyelashes) and sends them off together on an orgy of synonymizing. It looks like the beginning of a beautiful, lovely, resplendent friendshipuntil Stegothesaurus asks how Allothesaurus learned so many words and she admits that it must have been that other stegothesaurus she ate. Uh-oh. It's a good time, moment, instant to "Ruuuuuuuuuuuuun!" Happily, Heos lets her wordy, prolix, logorrheic dino survive to munch another day.The premise may not be exactly new (see, for instance, Laya Steinberg's Thesaurus Rex, illustrated by Debbie Harter, 2003), but exercises in clever wordplay are always fresh, animated, enlivening. (Picture book. 6-8) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.