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Templeton Gets His Wish

A Read-Along

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
This vibrant, funny cautionary tale from the three-time Geisel Award recipient Greg Pizzoli proves you should be careful what you wish for!
Templeton the cat doesn't like his parents telling him to clean up, and he really doesn't like when his brothers steal his toys. So, he makes a wish on a magic diamond, and his family disappears! At first, Templeton is over the moon. He's free to lounge and play all day, and he never has to take a bath. But being alone might not always be as fun as he'd thought. Will another wish on the magic diamond get Templeton what he really wants?
Don't miss these other favorites from Greg Pizzoli:The Watermelon SeedGood Night OwlThe Book HogThe Twelve Days of ChristmasNumber 1 SamThis Story is for You
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 2, 2015
      Pizzoli (Number One Sam) juices up the be-careful-what-you-wish-for theme with sly humor and a midcentury aesthetic that expresses itself in a vibrant palette of 1950s kitchen-appliance colors and bold, graphic forms. A tangerine-colored cat named Templeton is plagued by parents who order him to bathe and clean up, and brothers who steal his toys. But when he wishes them all away (thanks to a “magic diamond” he orders in the mail, funded by raiding his brother’s piggy bank), he soon discovers that the house is pretty lonely. “There was no one to play with. And he was starting to think he might need a bath after all,” writes Pizzoli as a bird nests on Templeton’s head and flies buzz around him. “Templeton was alone,” reads a spread dulled by the dismal gray of night, delivering a one-two punch as Templeton stares out glumly from his house’s single lighted window. Luckily, the magic diamond lets him wish his family back. Cheerful entertainment, with just a touch of snark. Ages 3–5. Agent: Steven Malk, Writers House.

    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2015
      Pizzoli's young cat, Templeton, gets what he wishes for, with predictable results. Templeton is the eldest kitten in the house, so he is the beneficiary of all the usual stuff: demanding parents-"Scrub harder, Templeton!" "Clean up this mess!"-and a trio of brothers who take his favorite toys. He comes across an advertisement in a comic book for a magic diamond that grants wishes. "So he did something bad"-robbing a brother's piggy bank-"and got something good in return." That's some rough philosophical ground, though it is also the most original-if disturbing-turf turned in this otherwise foreseeable tale. Templeton wishes his family gone; they disappear; he revels: playing, singing, lounging, making a mess of the house and himself. No more demands, no more sharing. Then things get boring, scary at night, stinky, and lonely. He wishes his family back, and back they come, same as they ever were, which is fine with Templeton: same demands, same sharing. Pizzoli brings extremely simple language to the task, and so too for the artwork, though here the complementary colors set eyeballs vibrating, and Templeton radiates a hepcat appeal. But the piggy-bank heist never gets revisited, ill wishes don't get explored, and no twist gives the old story some fresh air. Moderately inspired but tired all the same. (Picture book. 3-5)

    • School Library Journal

      May 1, 2015

      PreS-Gr 2-In this riff on the "Be careful what you wish for" adage, Templeton, a neon orange kitten, is fed up with his parents for constantly telling him to clean up and wash up and annoyed by his little brothers, who always take his toys. When he sees an ad for a magic wish-granting diamond, he robs his brother's piggy bank to fund his purchase. Once on his own, Templeton, like any other youngster, goes wild. He promptly draws all over the walls and stops bathing. His enjoyment of this new freedom is short-lived, however, as being by himself makes him lonely and quite dirty. He wishes that his family were back, and he no longer resents their demands and impositions upon their return. The retro-style cartoonish illustrations are reminiscent of Ed Emberley's work, with their bold greens, oranges, and teals, and their tongue-in-cheek humor complements Pizzoli's spare prose. VERDICT A fun and relatable story that teaches kids an important lesson without being overtly moralizing, this book will find a place in most collections.-Yelena Alekseyeva-Popova, formerly at Chappaqua Library, NY

      Copyright 2015 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      April 15, 2015
      Preschool-K Templeton just wants his family to leave him alone. They are always on his case to take a bath, clean up his mess, and share his toys with his little brothers. So Templeton orders a magic diamond that grants wishes, and he requests that his family disappear. Free to go unwashed, eat Sugar Snax on the couch, write on the walls, and have his toys all to himself, he is ecstatic until bedtime. The increasingly smelly and forlorn youngster becomes so lonesome that he wishes things back to the way they were before. A grouchy Mom says, You need a bath! while a cranky Dad whispers, Clean up this mess! and his brothers take all his favorite toys. A happy Templeton snuggles in bed, comforted by the return to normalcy. Pizzoli's wide-eyed and appealing orange cats are an expressive bunch. Templeton himself conveys intense emotion with a few simple lines and very bright colors, as his tale reflects the endearing aspects of a small child's struggles to behave.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      May 1, 2015
      Pesky younger siblings and cranky parents with high expectations drive cat Templeton to yearn for some peace and quiet. Can't he just be left alone? He does a bad thing (steals from his brother's piggy bank) and gets something good in return: a wish-granting diamond via mail order. With glee and ease, he wishes his family away and sets out to enjoy the solitude. Templeton plays hard and lounges hard. He cleans nothing, not even himself, and his solitary playtime romps are a little-kid's fantasy. But a limitless world gets old, even when it's what you think you want. Loneliness eventually consumes Templeton, and he wishes on the diamond for his family's return. A minimal palette dominated by neons (blue, green, and orange) and grays focuses our hero-cat's emotional highs and lows, muting his bad behavior and celebrating his solitary joy, while his facial expressions are conveyed through small line changes and skillful eyeball shifts. A handful of negative images and recycled spreads are purposefully composed to show how the same scenario can be felt in dramatically different ways. The story's exuberance is catching and reassuring -- who doesn't sometimes wish that those closest to them would just simply disappear? -- but it's a relief when his family returns, warts and all. Templeton is a celebration of independence, and of our complex feelings about those we love. pamela yosca

      (Copyright 2015 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2015
      Yearning for peace and quiet, cat Templeton steals from his brother's piggy bank and mail-orders a wish-granting diamond. He gleefully wishes his pesky family away and sets out to enjoy the solitude. But loneliness eventually consumes Templeton, and he wishes for his family's return. A minimal palette and skillful changes in facial expressions convey his emotional highs and lows.

      (Copyright 2015 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • OverDrive Read

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:1.8
  • Interest Level:K-3(LG)
  • Text Difficulty:0-1

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