Join Books.org — it's free

Airplanes, Helicopters & Aircraft, Cars & Trucks, Fiction - General & Miscellaneous
Five Trucks by Brian Floca, Dorling Kindersley Publishing Staff — book cover

Five Trucks

by Brian Floca, Dorling Kindersley Publishing Staff
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

You have hurried to be on time. You look now through a window and see five trucks. They are hurrying, too. Where are they going? Five drivers for five trucks—each has a job to do. They hurry to be on time. And then they see you!

Author Biography: Brian Floca has written and illustrated one other picture book, The Frightful Story of Harry Walfish, and previously illustrated Helen Ketteman's Luck with Potatoes. For older readers he has collaborated on several books by Avi: Poppy, winner of the Boston Globe/Horn Book Award for fiction, and three other connected stories about the same woodland characters, as well as the graphic novel City of Light, City of Dark, a Publishers Weekly Best Book of they Year. A native of Texas, Brian Floca now lives in New York City.

Five different trucks do five different jobs to get an airplane ready for takeoff.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Marilyn Bousquin

"Five drivers for five trucks" begins this concept book, as five workers head out across a tarmac. A simple, descriptive statement on each spread introduces the trucks one at a time ("the first truck is large and heavy...the fourth truck twists and turns"); later spreads reveal the function of each truck. The slow, metered pace gains momentum as the spare information builds from spread to spread, culminating with the revelation that the five drivers and their trucks are preparing an airplane for take-off. Floca's watercolors zoom in on the machinery, showing the trucks and essential parts of the plane up close against washed-out backgrounds. The simplicity is engaging and age appropriate (even those who are clueless about airport operations will catch on quickly). And a second reading is even more fun than the first: at close inspection, there is more to see here than just a plane taking off. An orange-haired boy zooms a toy airplane across the inside front jacket flap toward the title page. And there he is on the title page tugging on Dad's belt and pointing out an oversized window while dad lugs an overstuffed, rainbow-colored plaid suitcase. We see the unmistakable suitcase again when "luggage is unloaded from the fourth truck" onto a (labeled) conveyor belt and when "the third truck carries luggage up its back" into the belly of the plane. And, lo and behold, there is the boy, waving from the airplane window just before take-off. Floca is adept at fleshing out and expanding our knowledge of the situation at hand with a few casual details. In the initial spread, one worker passes out cups of coffee as he catches up with the others. The following spread shows several discarded cups on the cab floor of the first truck-a subtle hint that the workers' routine is played out regularly. And, in the take-off scene, the workers wave to the departing plane, a simple gesture that effectively brings the boy's and the workers' stories together. Floca's ability to interweave so much story and atmosphere into a concept book is sure to raise our expectations of those to come. -- Horn Book Magazine

Marilyn Bousquin

"five drives for fice trucks" begins this concept book, as five workers head out across a tarmac to prepare an airplane for take-off. At close inspection, there's more to see a boy, his dad, and an overstuffed, rainbow-colored plaid suitcase pop up in various illustrations. The book's simplicity is engaging and age appropriate even those who are vague about airport operations will catch on quickly.
The Horn Book Guide

Children's Literature - Dr. Beverly Kobrin

Brian Floca's view of airport workers and five trucks they used to help load and prepare a passenger plane for departure is evocative in its simplicity. Use it to engage little ones in conversation and introduce ordinal numbers as you follow the action.

School Library Journal

K-Gr 2-In expressive watercolor cartoons, Floca introduces and describes the functions of five airport vehicles. The drivers, both male and female, seem to enjoy their work as they operate a catering truck, a tractor with baggage carts, a baggage conveyor, a tractor for checking airplane wheels, and a push-out tractor. Instructive, double-page, clear pictures and a simple text give a perfect explanation of the uses of these trucks. Pair this book with Byron Barton's Airport (Crowell, 1982) for an eye-opening look at what happens to aircraft on the ground.-Ann Welton, Terminal Park Elementary School, Auburn, WA Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Floca (The Frightful Story of Harry Walfish, 1997, etc.) offers a great explication of the small trucks that airline passengers see scurrying around jets on the runways. In brightly painted illustrations and simple descriptions, he introduces each vehicle, explains what it does, and shows it in action, e.g., the truck called the baggage conveyor is shown hoisting suitcases into the belly of the plane. All five trucks' duties point to a big finale when the plane takes off. Given preschoolers' well-documented fascination with heavy machinery, this book will strike a chord with young air travelers, and answer the questions of older travelers as well. (Picture book. 6-10)

Book Details

Published
October 15, 2001
Publisher
DK Publishing, Inc.
Pages
32
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780789481887

More by Brian Floca, Dorling Kindersley Publishing Staff

Similar books