IF I HAD A GRYPHON · THEMES Animals • Mythical Creatures • Pets • Emotions Imagination •...

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READING GUIDE 2016 IF I HAD A GRYPHON VIKKI VANSICKLE IF I HAD A GRYPHON Vikki VanSickle PRE-K TO GRADE 2 / ENGLISH THEMES Animals • Mythical Creatures • Pets • Emotions Imagination • Stories in Verse THE STORY If I Had a Gryphon is a raucous rhyming read-aloud about fantastical beasts in everyday situations–and the increasingly beleaguered heroine who has to deal with them. BOOK SUMMARY Sam just got a hamster for a pet. She’s not really impressed. The hamster isn’t very exciting – he mostly eats and sleeps and gets his shavings wet. BORING! After reading a book about mythological creatures, Sam gets some ideas for more exciting pets. But she soon realizes that taking care of these magical beasts might not be as wonderful as she thought. Unicorns are shy, gryphons scare the dogs at the dog park and having a fire extinguisher handy at all times makes dragons seem like an awful lot of work. Maybe the hamster really is the best pet for her. A nice, safe pet…right? WEB RESOURCES • Author Website: https://vikkivansickle.wordpress.com/ • Publisher Website – Book: http://penguinrandomhouse.ca/books/246122/ if-i-had-gryphon#9781770498099 • Publisher Website – Author: http://penguinrandomhouse.ca/ authors/224828/vikki-vansickle ADDITIONAL RESOURCES • Tundra Books’ If I Had A Gryphon Poster Guide: https://tundrabooks.files. wordpress.com/2013/04/if-i-had-a-gryphon_ poster-guide.pdf • New World Encyclopedia’s Article on ‘Mythical Creature’: http://www.newworldencyclopedia. org/entry/Mythical_creature • Cressida Cowell’s article ‘Cressida Cowell’s top 10 mythical creatures’ for the Guardian: https://www.theguardian.com/childrens- books-site/2013/feb/16/cressida-cowell-top- 10-mythical-creatures • Kids.Net. Au Encyclopedia’s Article on ‘Mythical Beasts’: http://encyclopedia.kids.net. au/page/my/Mythical_creature AUTHOR PROFILE VIKKI VANSICKLE is the author of the acclaimed Clarissa books, including Words that Start with B, Love Is a Four-Letter Word and Days that End in Y. Vikki’s most recent middle grade novel, Summer Days, Starry Nights, has been called “Summer reading at its best” and is a finalist for the 2015 Red Maple Award. After obtaining an MA in Children’s Literature from UBC, Vikki’s career began in bookselling at The Flying Dragon Bookshop, which earned her the 2011 CBA Young Bookseller of the Year award. She is a popular children’s lit blogger and is frequently called upon to speak about kids’ books for radio panels, conferences, and as Lainey Gossip’s YA mentor!

Transcript of IF I HAD A GRYPHON · THEMES Animals • Mythical Creatures • Pets • Emotions Imagination •...

Page 1: IF I HAD A GRYPHON · THEMES Animals • Mythical Creatures • Pets • Emotions Imagination • Stories in Verse THE STORY If I Had a Gryphon is a raucous rhyming read-aloud about

READING GUIDE 2016 • IF I HAD A GRYPHON • VIKKI VANSICKLE

IF I HAD A GRYPHONVikki VanSickle

PRE-K TO GRADE 2 / ENGLISH

THEMES Animals • Mythical Creatures • Pets • Emotions Imagination • Stories in Verse

THE STORYIf I Had a Gryphon is a raucous rhyming read-aloud about fantastical beasts in everyday situations–and the increasingly beleaguered heroine who has to deal with them.

BOOK SUMMARYSam just got a hamster for a pet. She’s not really impressed. The hamster isn’t very exciting – he mostly eats and sleeps and gets his shavings wet. BORING! After reading a book about mythological creatures, Sam gets some ideas for more exciting pets. But she soon realizes that taking care of these magical beasts might not be as wonderful as she thought. Unicorns are shy, gryphons scare the dogs at the dog park and having a fire extinguisher handy at all times makes dragons seem like an awful lot of work. Maybe the hamster really is the best pet for her. A nice, safe pet…right?

WEB RESOURCES

• Author Website: https://vikkivansickle.wordpress.com/

• Publisher Website – Book: http://penguinrandomhouse.ca/books/246122/if-i-had-gryphon#9781770498099

• Publisher Website – Author: http://penguinrandomhouse.ca/authors/224828/vikki-vansickle

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

• Tundra Books’ If I Had A Gryphon Poster Guide: https://tundrabooks.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/if-i-had-a-gryphon_poster-guide.pdf

• New World Encyclopedia’s Article on ‘Mythical Creature’: http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Mythical_creature

• Cressida Cowell’s article ‘Cressida Cowell’s top 10 mythical creatures’ for the Guardian: https://www.theguardian.com/childrens-books-site/2013/feb/16/cressida-cowell-top-10-mythical-creatures

• Kids.Net. Au Encyclopedia’s Article on ‘Mythical Beasts’: http://encyclopedia.kids.net.au/page/my/Mythical_creature

AUTHOR PROFILE

VIKKI VANSICKLE is the author of the acclaimed Clarissa books, including Words that Start with B, Love Is a Four-Letter Word and Days that End in Y. Vikki’s most recent middle grade novel, Summer Days, Starry Nights, has been called “Summer reading at its best” and is a finalist for the 2015 Red Maple Award. After obtaining an MA in Children’s Literature from UBC, Vikki’s career began in bookselling at The Flying Dragon Bookshop, which earned her the 2011 CBA Young Bookseller of the Year award. She is a popular children’s lit blogger and is frequently called upon to speak about kids’ books for radio panels, conferences, and as Lainey Gossip’s YA mentor!

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READING GUIDE 2016 • IF I HAD A GRYPHON • VIKKI VANSICKLE

READING COMPREHENSION

• Why was Sam unhappy with her hamster?

• What were some of the mythological pets Sam dreamed of? What were her reasons for wanting them?

• What were some of Sam’s reasons for not wanting her mythological pets?

DISCUSS

• Which pet would you most like to have?

• What qualities would you want in a pet?

• Look to the ending page of the book, what is different about Sam’s hamster? What kind of mythological creature might Sam’s hamster be? What kind of characteristics and abilities would it have?

SUGGESTED READINGS

FROM THE SAME AUTHOR

• This is Vikki Vansickle’s first children’s book.

BY OTHER ARTISTS FROM WORDFEST 2016

• (For K to Gr. 2) Fox and Squirrel: The Best Christmas Ever (2016) by Ruth Ohi http://www.scholastic.ca/rights/titles/special/fox-and-squirrel-the-best-christmas-ever/

• (Pre-K to Gr. 2) Harry and Walter (2016) by Kathy Stinson http://www.annickpress.com/Harry-and-Walter

• (Gr. 2 to 5) Fluffy Strikes Back (2016) by Ashley Spires http://www.kidscanpress.com/products/fluffy-strikes-back

• A Long Way Away (2013) by Frank Viva http://www.hachettebookgroup.com/titles/none/a-long-way-away/9780316221962/

OTHER BOOKS ON RELATED SUBJECT

• (For K to Gr. 3) Dragons Love Tacos (2012) by Adam Rubin http://www.penguin.com/book/dragons-love-tacos-by-adam-rubin-illustrated-by-daniel-salmieri/9780803736801

• (For K to Gr. 3) Where the Wild Things Are (1963) by Maurice Sendak http://www.harpercollins.ca/9780060254926/where-the-wild-things-are

• (For K to Gr. 4) If I Ran the Zoo (1950) by Dr. Suess http://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/43071/if-i-ran-the-zoo-by-dr-seuss/9780385379052/

• (For Pre-K to Gr. 2) A Unicorn Named Sparkle (2016) by Amy Young http://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374301859

• (For Pre-K to Gr. 3) I Wish I Had a Pet (2014) by Maggie Rudy http://www.simonandschuster.ca/books/I-Wish-I-Had-a-Pet/Maggie-Rudy/9781442453326

VanSickle’s rhymes are unflaggingly exuberant as the girl puts up with noisy harpies, biting chupacabras, and mischievous fairies, and Atkinson fills the pages with visual comedy.”

—Publishers Weekly

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READING GUIDE 2016 • IF I HAD A GRYPHON • VIKKI VANSICKLE

CURRICULUM CONNECTION

ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS

KINDERGARTEN:

• Share personal experiences prompted by oral, print and other media texts (1.1)

• Connect oral language with print and pictures (2.1)

• Talk about and represent the actions of characters portrayed in oral, print and other media texts (2.2)

GRADE 1:

• Use knowledge of context, pictures, letters, words, sentences, predictable patterns and rhymes in a variety of oral, print and other media texts to construct and confirm meaning (2.1)

• Experiment with repetition, rhyme and rhythm to create effects in own oral, print and other media texts (2.2)

• Demonstrate interest in repetition, rhyme and rhythm in shared language experiences, such as action songs and word play (2.3)

GRADE 2:

• Connect personal experiences and knowledge of words, sentences and story patterns from previous reading experiences to construct and confirm meaning (2.1)

• Identify how pictures, illustrations and special fonts relate to and enhance print and other media texts (2.3)

ACTIVITIES

A POSTER GUIDE – BY PENGUIN RANDOM HOUSE

Penguin Random House’s Poster Guide for If I Had a Gryphon has a great list of activities for the classroom. Please see the attached Guide.

If I Had a Gryphon is a raucous rhyming read-aloud about fantastical beasts in everyday situations—and the increasingly beleaguered heroine who has to deal with them.”

—From the Publisher

In a sweet ending, Sam realizes her perfect pet has been beside her all the time.”

—National Reading Campaign

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IF I HAD A GRYPHON By Vikki VanSickle | Illustrated by Cale AtkinsonISBN 978-1-77049-809-9penguinrandomhouse.ca

MAGICALMAGICALReading is

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About the BookSam just got a hamster for a pet. But the hamster is kind of boring ... he just eats and sleeps and gets his shavings wet. Inspired by her book of mythological creatures, Sam longs for a more exciting pet. But she soon realizes that taking care of these magical beasts might not be as wonderful as she thought. Sasquatches are messy, unicorns are shy, hippogriffs scare the dogs at the dog park, and having a fire extinguisher handy at all times makes dragons seem like an awful lot of work. This raucous rhyming read-aloud about fantastical beasts in everyday situations and the increasingly beleaguered heroine who has to deal with them can be used in a number of ways including:• Exploring themes and concepts such as

responsibility, connection, imagination, advantage, disadvantage, compare, contrast and culture

• Studying word play and the impact of word selection• As an engaging and fun read-aloud experience

Where applicable, activities have been aligned with Common Core State Standards.

About the AuthorVIKKI VANSICKLE is the author of the acclaimed Clarissa books, including Words that Start with B, Love Is a Four-Letter Word and Days that End in Y. Vikki’s most recent middle grade novel, Summer Days, Starry Nights, has been called “summer reading at its best” and was a finalist for the Red Maple Award. After obtaining an MA in Children’s Literature from UBC, Vikki’s career began in bookselling at The Flying Dragon Bookshop, which earned her the 2011 CBA Young Bookseller of the Year award. Currently Vikki balances writing with her duties as the Marketing and Publicity Manager for Young Readers at Penguin Canada. Vikki lives with a cat named Barb who would prefer not to have to share the house with a sasquatch.

About the IllustratorCALE ATKINSON is an illustrator and animator living lakeside with his family in Kelowna, British Columbia. Believing in tea more than sleep, Cale is constantly working on numerous projects. His work can be found in children’s books, including To the Sea which he wrote and illustrated, animated shorts, television and games. If he had to choose, Cale would probably want a hippogriff as a pet, to go on adventures and solve mysteries with. Or maybe just a goldfish …

ILLUSTRATION © CALE ATKINSON

ILLUSTRATION © CALE ATKINSON

Common Core State Standards

Reading: Literature

Writing

Speaking and Listening

Pre-Reading Discussion/Activities

Reading and Literature K.10

Speaking and Listening K.1, K.6, 1.1, 2.1

Follow-Up Discussion/Activities

Reading and Literature K.1, K.10, 1.1, 2.1, 2.3

Speaking and Listening K.2, 1.1, 1.2, 2.1, 2.2

Learning Activities

1. Reading and Literature K.1, 1.1, 1.7, 2.1, 2.3, 2.7

Writing K.2, 1.2, W.2.2

2. Writing K.3, 1.3, 2.3

Speaking and Listening K.5, 1.5

3. Writing K.2, 1.2, 2.2

4. Writing K.2, 1.2, 2.2

Pre-Reading Discussion/Activities 1. Brainstorm a list of common domestic pets. Do you have

a pet? 2. Select one of the pets from the list. What are some of the

advantages and disadvantages of having this pet?3. If you were allowed to keep any pet, which one would you

choose? Why?4. Brainstorm a list of qualities that a person should have to

be a good pet owner.5. What is a mythological creature? Can you think of any

examples of mythological creatures?

Follow-Up Discussion/Activities 1. Vocabulary to introduce/review: mythological, exotic,

“starry sheen,” burly, temperamental, sturdy2. How does Sam feel at the beginning of the story about her

new pet hamster? How does she feel at the end of the story? Why does her thinking change?

3. If you could choose any of the mythological creatures in the story as your pet, which one would it be? Why?

4. What happens on the last page of the story? If the story were to continue, what would happen next?

5. Review the mythological creatures Sam considers in the story. For each creature, Sam thinks of a disadvantage or problem associated with owning it as a pet. Can you imagine any advantages of owning each of these pets?

6. Do you think there is a lesson to be learned from this story? If so, what?

Learning Activities1. Look carefully at the illustrations in the story. Locate

instances in the story where Sam appears to be feeling the following: excited, proud, scared, worried, tired, frustrated, unhappy, bored, angry. Select one of these examples and in a simple sentence, explain why Sam is feeling this way. Can you think of a time when you felt the same emotion/feeling?

2. The mythological creatures mentioned in the book come from a wide selection of cultures and regions around the world. Conduct a quick search to determine which part of the world each creature is associated with. On a world map, note which region each creature is connected to. Select one of the creatures that you would be interested in learning more about. Research the part of the world and/or culture that the creature is associated with and sketch, draw or paint your own interpretation of this creature. Write a short story with this mythological creature as one of the main characters.

3. Create and name your own mythological creature. Begin by sketching out what your creature would look like and/ or write a brief description of how it looks, sounds, feels and smells. Select a region of the world that would make sense for your creature to be connected with. In writing and/or pictures show three things that would make your creature an ideal pet and three things that would make your creature a problematic pet.

4. Based on Sam’s imagined challenges for owning

exotic, mythological creatures, what do you think the characteristics of an ideal pet are? Make a list of five essential qualities of the ideal domestic pet. Create a how-to guide that describes how best to care for this animal.

5. Use the list of mythological creatures below to complete the following tasks: • Alphabetize the list of creatures.• Sort the list according to the number of syllables in each

creature’s name.• Sort the list according to the number of letters in each

creature’s name.• Sort the list according to big, medium and small-sized

creatures (use the illustrations in the story to help you).• Divide the list into two groups: familiar and unfamiliar

creatures.• Divide the list into two groups: creatures you would

want as a pet and those you would not want as a pet.• Select one of the creatures from the list and compare/

contrast it with a hamster using a Venn diagram to organize your thoughts.

unicornhippogriffsasquatchgryphonkrakendragon

kirinjackalopephoenixmanticoreharpieschupacabras

fairieskelpiesbasiliskchimeramermaidssprites

6. What is the rhyming pattern in the story? For each of the following pairs of rhyming words, think of another word that rhymes. Locate the instances in the story where the author chose not to use rhyming words. Circle the pairs of words below that belong to the same word families (i.e., pet, wet).

pet, wetpowers, hoursmane, rainshy, tryfetch, stretchscary, hairyfur, burr

feather, weathersnout, outwide, ridebite, lightscratch, catchsweet, feetsea, me

7. Locate the following phrases in the story and explain their meaning in your own words.• “while away the hours”• “things could get quite hairy”• “a temperamental snout”

8. Fill in the following with your own words, using the rhyming pattern from the story. Draw a picture to accompany your work.

If I had a

I’d

I’d make him/her

That

Linksvikkivansickle.wordpress.comcale.capenguinrandomhouse.ca

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