Nick Sharratt is perhaps best known for illustrating the hugely popular stories of Jacqueline Wilson, but he has also written an extensive catalogue of children's picture books himself, including this entertaining but surprisingly inventive play on rhyme, phonics, spelling and creativity. Initially, it might seem an octopus is a creature possessing a phonically challenging name for inventive language or word play, but Sharratt adapts and rhymes with 'oc', 'pus', 'octo' and other sound combinations in a manner that young readers at EYFS and even KS1 will find very entertaining and engaging. Coupled with Sharratt's almost luminously striking colour selection and Nick Denchfield's kinaesthetic paper engineering providing very hands-on learning opportunities for children with SEN, you could read this picture book through 5 times and on each occasion discover something new that you missed on the previous read. Children could be inspired to choose their own animal, and design their own creations built around its name; they could gain huge enjoyment and reinforce learning from the book by acting it out as a group physical performance; they could even link to sea creatures in science or counting up to 8, or counting in 8s, in maths. Nick Sharratt also published 'Elephant Wellyphant' on very similar lines to 'Octopus' in the same year, 2008, providing further opportunities for language exploration for the classroom: would could the children invent for themselves using 'crocodile', 'kangaroo', 'guinea pig' or 'meerkat'?