An enjoyable, quirky book that will make children giggle ... and wiggle ... about the fellow ... who swallowed a cello!
Ages: 4 - 8
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This is a great book to introduce musical instruments to K-3 students. As the name suggests, this is a takeoff of the old lady and the fly stories. But this story has a happier ending since the guy just sneezes the last instrument out. The illustrations are pretty wild in this text and will keep the students' attention. There are lesson plans available online to support this text at http://readingtokids.org/Books/BookVi...
This book is a take-off on the Old Woman who swallowed... books. This one uses musical instruments. It's the teeny tiny bell that causes him to bellow out all of the instruments. Fun imaginary book. I liked the drawings that illustrate this book. Kindergarteners would love this book. I could see it also being used as a mentor text in showing how authors take a tale and alter it.
Not all variants on the "I know an old lady who swallowed a fly" rhyme books are good. This one is great. The choices for the next thing to swallow all made sense (as far as the rhyme goes) and this especially hit a high point because my stepdaughter's father actually plays a cello.
First of all, I really am not a fan of any "I knew...who swallowed..." books. It's a tired and overused formula. Using instruments instead of animals did not improve the formula. And I didn't like the illustrations.
This book just wasn't what I hoped. It was an add in book, so it was constantly adding in more things he ate and it just wasn't for me or Winry. I also thought the illustrations were a bit creepy, but others might like them.
This book was cute. I think that this would be a book that children would find funny because of the man swallowing the instruments. This book would be a good way to help practice finding words that rhyme with each other.
I'm a big fan of "I know a [blank] who swallowed a [blank]" riffs, but the illustrations in this book were the stuff of nightmares. Creeped me out, hard.
Gloriously vivid illustrations, but text that got very repetitive and too long. While it was interesting to hear the spins on instruments, I was getting bored repeating things.
This is a rhyming book about a man who swallows a cello. Then he swallows a harp, then more and more instruments until he swallows the tiniest bell. Well, after all the other instruments, the bell was the one that made him the fullest. Throughout the introduction of each new instrument, the book repeats every other instrument the guy swallowed before hand. In the end, he ends up getting rid of each instrument in the opposite direction of the way he swallowed them. I'm not quite sure what kind of domain besides musical this would fall under and it really doesn't seem to be a teaching book of any one thing. In the end, I think it's just a cute rhyming book that gets some what too repetitive for me.
LE: Have pictures of different instruments laid out on the table, and while reading the story in a small group, have one student at a time find the instrument that the guy is swallowing at that point in the story.
I always get really bored in the middle of this book when you start repeating all the phrases again and again, "He swallowed the flute to jam with the sax. He swalled the sax to jam with Harp." etc. It's also not based in reality (ie. swallow huge instruments and see their outline in the stomach) so some kids might not like it.
On the positive side, there are some great rhymes and the pictures are comical and fun. It also shows a number of musical instruments you can use to teach children the names. I like the ending better than the first half - when everything comes back out. Better rhymes, much more fun to read and see.
This entertaining story is a variation of There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly and can be performed/sung in the same way. There was a shy fellow who enjoyed musical instruments so much that he swallowed a cello, then a harp, followed by six more music instruments. Having swallowed one too many, they had to come back up. Fun illustrations. This book fit in the 52 book club's summer '23 reading challenge, prompt "Pick Your Road Trip Tunes: a book inspired by country music."
This book had me laughing out loud over the pictures. It is a great prediction book. : What do you think is going to happen to the shy fellow with all of the instruments now inside him? I am smiling just thinking about a child's reaction to this book. It is funny, and there is also music vocabulary in it.
This has to be one of the weaker entires in the Swallow series. It has a clever idea and does introduce some different instruments, children may not know about, but the animation is stick figure like and bizzare and the frankly boring. I couldn't get through this book once, without the kids walking away, losing interest. Good idea, not great presentation.
Cute, rhyming story with lots of humor. Great read for a end of the day book. Not too many educational themes, yet children would love to hear this funny and silly story over and over again. It is good for recitation, and remembering.
A musical retelling of "I Know an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly." The pictures are fun -- detailed -- and the rhymes and vocabulary and wordplay are outstanding.
This book has got a soft spot in my heart as it's one I read to my firstborn when he was just a little guy. :-)
A delightful book for children that, while based on "I know an old woman who swallowed a fly" does double duty by teaching children all sorts of musical instruments! Just hopefully, children don't try to swallow them, but play them instead...
This is a fantastic read aloud book. It had everyone chuckling at the end. Yes, the rhyming is repetitive, but it is a musical retelling of The Old Woman Who Swallowed a Fly, so that is to be expected.
This is a silly, silly book with very fun illustrations. The first half of the book, and some of the second, can be sung to "There Was An Old Lady Who Swallowed A Fly." The repetitive rhymes work well if you read them as nature intended: absolutely as fast as your tongue will allow. :)
Amusing but inferior twist on "I know an old lady who swallowed a fly". My little ones and I have been talking about different kinds of musical instruments lately so this was an entertaining way to reinforce that.