Chicken Little and the Very Long Race

Chicken Little returns in a third episode and at the outset she’s feeling bemused. Why the great ado about an announcement that the local record holder, Hare, is to compete in an upcoming marathon, she wonders. The hens have turned the barnyard into a training zone and it seems there’s no getting away from the event. Even though Chicken Little is not by nature a competitive creature, she begins to wonder whether she too should take part. Until that is a certain book penned by Hare appears and her gullible feathered friends start following it to the letter: smoothies aplenty, special ‘Hare-Brand’ sneakers, headbands, self belief in bucket loads, but nothing that might enhance one’s stamina.

Surely not, thinks Chicken Little who tries getting her pals up and doing some preparatory running but they dismiss her concerns, suggesting she prove her running prowess by participating herself, and so she signs up

and starts training, slowly and steadily.

Come race day, Hare is immediately the focus of attention for every chicken, save one. When the race begins it’s soon evident to Chicken Little that the other hens are having serious problems and before long there are only two contenders left in the running. Which one will be first past the post: fame obsessed Hare or our determined little avian competitor?

The combination of Sam Wedelich’s hand-lettered text, speech bubbles and chuckle-inducing digital illustrations make for another fractured fable with an important lesson for humans, as well as for the characters herein.

Huge fun to read aloud to a KS1 class or for solo reading.

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