I’ve published extremely short fiction in the collections Laugh Track and My Date with Neanderthal Woman (Dzanc Short Story Collection Prize), extremely long fiction in the novels Flesh, Turning Japanese, and How to Cope with Suburban Stress (Kirkus Best Books of the Year), and a lot in between. My latest is Brevity: A Flash Fiction Handbook, from Columbia University Press. Day job: professor of English and creative writing program director at Montclair State University. I’m also the editor in chief at Vestal Review, the longest-running flash fiction magazine on the planet. @dgalef https://davidgalef.com/ https://www.vestalreview.net/
This railway team is aMAZing at following the directions from their boss! When his glasses break one hot day - when they’re supposed to lay some SERious track down - a bit of whimsical chaos unleashes and they create a very unique railroad. AND all in a day’s time, too! A fun little read for the kiddos. 😊
Albert and his crew were laying track for the new railroad from Granville to Denton. But when Albert's glasses crack and he can't see very well, he takes the railway on a crazy path through a pond, twisting around cows, through a barn and over the treetops, making for a very exciting ride. But what will the mayor think?
Albert, a railroad worker, has to lay a new track from Granville to Denton. His crew followed his every instruction, so when Albert accidentally breaks his glasses and tells the workers to lay tracks in odd places, they listen. He cannot see without his glasses, so water looks like the sky to him and cows like boulders. He orders his crew around and through these odd places, making for an arrange of railroad tracks. When the mayor and other people of the town ride it, they are in for a thrilling ride. I am a fan of Tedd Arnold's illustrations and his work on this book did not disappoint. He seemed to bring Albert's nervous personality through the pictures in a short time. The illustrations were hilarious because the characters are so animated and so many things are going in each page. I would enjoy reading this book to any grade because I feel like students would enjoy the illustrations. Not only that, but the text includes loud, action words, like THUD, that would be fun to read aloud with the class.
A railroad construction manager breaks his glasses and cannot see where is is telling his builders to construct the new railroad through or in. The train tracks become quite an adventure to travel on as it goes through a pond and even right over a forest of trees. This is good for Preschool-3rd grade students. This book will make children laugh and smile as they see all the goofy places that the construction manager is telling his builder to lay the new railroad tracks.
This book honors the thinking behind, "It's all in how you 'see' things." In Albert's loss of sight, he was able to "see" a more exciting path for a railroad that left riders celebrating his "out of the box" thinking. Sometimes broken lenses aren't all bad.
This is a fun-reads book. I believe a child would enjoy this book because of the spelling of different words, and the colorful illustrations that are used in the story.