Rock, Brock, and the Savings Shock Spiral-Bound | March 1, 2017

Sheila Bair, Barry Gott (Illustrated by)

★★★★☆+ from 31 to 100 ratings

$20.37 - Free Shipping
Rock and Brock may be twins, but they are as different as two twins can be. One day, their grandpa offers them a plan—for ten straight weeks on Saturday he will give them each one dollar. But there is a catch! “Listen now, for here’s the trick, each buck you save, I’ll match it quick. But spend it, there’s no extra dough, so save your cash, and…

2010 Bill Martin Jr. Picture Book Award Master List (Kansas Reading Association)
2009 Association for Gerontology in Higher Education Book Award for Children's Literature on Aging for Primary Readers

Rock and Brock may be twins, but they are as different as two twins can be. One day, their grandpa offers them a plan—for ten straight weeks on Saturday he will give them each one dollar. But there is a catch! "Listen now, for here's the trick, each buck you save, I'll match it quick. But spend it, there’s no extra dough, so save your cash, and watch it grow." Rock is excited—there are all sorts of things he can buy for one dollar! So each week he spends his money on something different—an inflatable moose head, green hair goo, white peppermint wax fangs. But while Rock is spending his money, Brock is saving his. And each week when Rock gets just one dollar, Brock’s savings get matched. By the end of summer, Brock has five hundred and twelve dollars, while Rock has none. When Rock sees what his brother has saved, he realizes he has made a mistake. But Brock shows him that it is never too late to start saving.

Publisher: Albert Whitman & Company
Original Binding: Trade Paperback
Pages: 32 pages
ISBN-10: 0807570958
Item Weight: 0.3 lbs
Dimensions: 8.0 x 0.09 x 10.0 inches
Customer Reviews: 4 out of 5 stars 31 to 100 ratings

2010 Bill Martin Jr. Picture Book Award Master List (Kansas Reading Association)
2009 Association for Gerontology in Higher Education Book Award for Children's Literature on Aging for Primary Readers

Sheila Bair has had a long and distinguished career in finance, academia, and government. She is perhaps best known as the Chair of the FDIC during the 2008-2009 financial crisis, when she was twice named by Forbes Magazine as the second most powerful woman in the world. A lifelong advocate for strong financial regulation and consumer protections, she is the author of the New York Times bestseller Bull by the Horns, her memoir of the financial crisis, and is a frequent op-ed contributor and TV commentator, as well as author of several children's books on financial matters.