Slug Needs a Hug!

by Jeanne Willis (Author) Tony Ross (Illustrator)

Reading Level: 2nd − 3rd Grade
When it begins to bug Slug that his mom doesn't hug him, he leaves home to find out why. Kitten suggests he should be furrier, so he puts on a woolly hat while Bird suggests he needs a beak. Soon, Slug has a new look. Will his mom hug him now?
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Kirkus

Sluggy may not have limbs for hugs, but the book feels like a big, generous embrace. (Picture book. 4-8)

Copyright 2015 Kirkus Reviews, LLC Used with Permission.

School Library Journal

PreS-Gr 2-- Poor slug is "wet and weedy, very, very needy, and always greedy for a hug." Sadly, his mother never hugs him. One at a time, various animals tell slug how he should make himself "more huggable, less slithery and sluggable"--namely, by making himself more like them. Tony Ross's deliciously silly ink and watercolor illustrations are a delightful complement to Jeanne Willis's bouncy rhyming text. When Slug returns to his mother, she doesn't even recognize her son beneath the ersatz fur, feathers, snout, beak, and legs. In the satisfying conclusion, Slug's mother confesses she adores her son as he is: "If I could, I'd hug you darling!" Alas, slugs have no arms "and so...They kissed!" This is a kinder, gentler version of Bernard Waber's classic, You Look Ridiculous, Said the Rhinoceros to the Hippopotamus (Houghton Mifflin, 1973). Both stories stress the absurdity of changing to imitate others, but Willis's tale places more affirming emphasis on the protagonist's innate lovability. VERDICT This is a fun and whimsical choice for storytimes about individuality, self-esteem, and love.--Rachel Anne Mencke, St. Matthew's Parish School, Pacific Palisades, CA

Copyright 2015 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes

Poor slug is 'wet and weedy, very, very needy, and always greedy for a hug.' Sadly, his mother never hugs him. One at a time, various animals tell slug how he should make himself 'more huggable, less slithery and sluggable'—namely, by making himself more like them. Tony Ross's deliciously silly ink and watercolor illustrations are a delightful complement to Jeanne Willis's bouncy rhyming text. When Slug returns to his mother, she doesn't even recognize her son beneath the ersatz fur, feathers, snout, beak, and legs. In the satisfying conclusion, Slug's mother confesses she adores her son as he is: 'If I could, I'd hug you darling!' Alas, slugs have no arms 'and so....They kissed! This is a kinder, gentler version of Bernard Waber's classic, You Look Ridiculous, Said the Rhinoceros to the Hippopotamus (Houghton Mifflin, 1973). Both stories stress the absurdity of changing to imitate others, but Willis's tale places more affirming emphasis on the protagonist's innate lovability. VERIDCT: This is a fun and whimsical choice for storytimes about individuality, self-esteem, and love.School Library Journal

— "Journal"
Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9781467793094
Lexile Measure
850
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Andersen Press
Publication date
October 01, 2015
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV002140 - Juvenile Fiction | Animals | Insects, Spiders, etc.
Library of Congress categories
Animals
Stories in rhyme
Mother and child
Hugging
Slugs (Mollusks)

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