Twenty Big Trucks in the Middle of the Street Spiral-Bound | February 10, 2015

Mark Lee, Kurt Cyrus (Illustrated by)

★★★☆☆+ from 501 to 1,000 ratings

$18.98 - Free Shipping
“A lively picture book multitasking as a counting book, a truck book, and an ice-cream wish-fulfillment story.” The Horn Book

If you’re a little boy on a bike, an ice-cream truck on your street is always a welcome sight. But what if the truck breaks down? The ensuing backup of trucks of all types, sizes, and functions offers ample opportunity for ogling—and counting—in this lively story.
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Original Binding: Board Book
Pages: 30 pages
ISBN-10: 0763676500
Item Weight: 0.8 lbs
Dimensions: 7.1 x 0.7 x 7.3 inches
Customer Reviews: 3 out of 5 stars 501 to 1,000 ratings
[A] lively picture book multitasking as a counting book, a truck book, and an ice-cream wish-fulfillment story...
—The Horn Book

It’s [Cyrus's] portrayal of the trucks as solid machines momentarily sidelined from their essential duties, along with the evocation of a neighborhood brought together by a benign “Didja ever...” moment, that makes the book feel inspired.
—Publishers Weekly

Counting books in verse are plentiful, but this one stands out. The words roll off the tongue, a good thing, as children will demand to hear it again and again.
—School Library Journal

Not just a counting book, the rhyming text artfully tells a story, which climaxes when the clever young observer suggests a nifty way to get the trucks rolling again. ... Good for storytimes and one-on-one sharing, this should delight even the most jaded of truck-book aficionados.
—Booklist Online

[H]andsome entertainment. This softly rhyming picture book presents children with a small but exciting dilemma that quickly involves—hurrah!—all sorts of trucks.
—The Wall Street Journal

The large format, bouncy rhyme and increasing mayhem all answer the energetic child's desire for things to be big and loud. However, the book subtly focuses the attention, too, as its captivating illustrations invite careful "reading."
—Newsday