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One Chicken Nugget

One Chicken Nugget

Current price: $19.94
Publication Date: March 7th, 2023
Publisher:
Balzer + Bray
ISBN:
9780062689825
Pages:
40
Usually Ships in 1 to 5 Days

Description

Inspired by the classic folktale "One Grain of Rice," One Chicken Nugget is a monstrously funny new picture book—with a mathematical twist!—from the author-illustrator of Little Penguin Gets the Hiccups.

Everybody knows monsters love chicken nuggets, but Frank loved them more than most.

This is a problem if you happen to sell chicken nuggets, and Celeste sells the finest nuggets around. But Frank scares her other customers away, so she’s forced to cook up an eating contest of monstrous proportions to get rid of him. If Frank wins, Celeste will make him free chicken nuggets for life. But if he loses, he must leave and never return. 

It starts with Frank eating a single chicken nugget. 

Then two. Then double that, then double it again . . .

Just how quickly does this doubling add up?

And how many chicken nuggets can Frank really eat?

About the Author

Tadgh Bentley is a picture book author and illustrator from the UK, now living in South Western Ohio with his wife, Emily, son, Fionn, and dog, Atticus. He is the author-illustrator of the Little Penguin series of picture books and I Can Read books, including Little Penguin Gets the Hiccups, as well as the picture book Samson: The Piranha Who Came to Dinner. You can visit him online at www.tadghbentley.com.

Tadgh Bentley is a picture book author and illustrator from the UK, now living in South Western Ohio with his wife, Emily, son, Fionn, and dog, Atticus. He is the author-illustrator of the Little Penguin series of picture books and I Can Read books, including Little Penguin Gets the Hiccups, as well as the picture book Samson: The Piranha Who Came to Dinner. You can visit him online at www.tadghbentley.com.

Praise for One Chicken Nugget

"Delicious to the last morsel." — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

“A funny, lighthearted explanation of exponential growth that is easy to understand for even the most reluctant mathematicians…. An ideal story for making a greedy point go down smoothly.” — School Library Journal