From School Library Journal
PreS?The wheels on this bus don't go round and round. Instead, one wheel gets stuck in a pothole?"OH NO!"?and a van, car, motorcycle, steamroller, and little truck all must "STOP!" Finally, a passing tractor saves the day. Everyone then drives away except the little truck and the steamroller; they repair the road. The action is simple, sequential, and quick paced. Benedict's jaunty ink lines, flat gouache colors, and bold sense of design, including a clever fold-out section, create an energetic array of agreeable characters and vehicles all stranded on the side of the road. A sequence with a rabbit pictured on the front and back endpapers adds its own bit of humor and fun. With its large typeface and supplemental cartoon dialogue balloons, this story begs to be read aloud, preferably to a crowd of toddlers who, with minimal prodding, won't be able to resist participating.?Martha Topol, Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City, MI
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Ages 2^-4. With a very simple rhyming text and large, bright ink-and-gouache pictures, this story of a roadblock will grab all those small children who love vehicles. The big red bus gets stuck when one wheel is caught in a hole in the road. A van coming behind can't go because of the bus; then a car, a motorcycle, a steamroller--all have to STOP. A double-page spread of all the drivers shouting "Help!" opens out to four pages showing all the vehicles stuck one behind the other in a long line. Finally, a tractor comes from the right and pulls out the bus, the other vehicles drive around the hole, and the steamroller is used to pave it over. Kids will enjoy identifying each part of the cumulative traffic drama.
Hazel Rochman
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.