Jill Bennett (1)
Author of Teeny Tiny
For other authors named Jill Bennett, see the disambiguation page.
Series
Works by Jill Bennett
Associated Works
Absolute Zero: Being the Second Part of the Bagthorpe Saga (1978) — Illustrator, some editions — 231 copies, 6 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- female
- Places of residence
- Woodchester, Gloucestershire, England, UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- England, UK
Members
Reviews
A teeny tiny woman finds a teeny tiny bone at the graveyard, and decides to bring it home and make soup with it, in this traditional English ghost story, only to find herself with a not-so-teeny-tiny problem, when a ghost shows up, demanding the return of his bone.
Originally collected in Joseph Jacobs' English Fairy Tales, this odd little tale has also been retold by Paul Galdone and Jane O'Connor. This edition, with text by Jill Bennett, seems to be a fairly straightforward reproduction of show more the Jacobs version, and will be of particular interest to Tomie dePaola fans, I think. With its repetitive structure (everything is "teeny tiny"), and ghoulish subject matter, Teeny Tiny would make a wonderful story-hour selection, particularly around Halloween. show less
Originally collected in Joseph Jacobs' English Fairy Tales, this odd little tale has also been retold by Paul Galdone and Jane O'Connor. This edition, with text by Jill Bennett, seems to be a fairly straightforward reproduction of show more the Jacobs version, and will be of particular interest to Tomie dePaola fans, I think. With its repetitive structure (everything is "teeny tiny"), and ghoulish subject matter, Teeny Tiny would make a wonderful story-hour selection, particularly around Halloween. show less
A "teeny tiny" woman takes a bone home to make a soup. But when she gets into bed, a haunting voice asks for it back. Yikes! A great story to show building tension and suspense, and also dramatic irony: we see the ghosts but the woman doesn't. It's also a funny story because everything is preceded by the adjectives "teeny tiny" so we develop a pattern throughout the story. Read in a "teeny tiny" voice and then an increasingly loud booming voice as we near the climax of the action. A big hit show more with kindergarteners! show less
I enjoyed reading this book, especially the poem entitled Rhyme by Elizabeth Coatworth, because of the rhythmic and creative writing and vivid illustrations. First, the poem "Rhyme" describes a thunderstorm that rattles a house and parallels it to a dunderstorm, blunderstorm, plunderstorm, and wonderstorm. Suchlike descriptive synonyms help the readers to visualize how loud and frightening it must have been to watch and listen to the thunderstorm through the windows. I also liked the show more illustration because it vividly shows the dark skies and the house that shakes from the roaring thunderstorm. The main idea of this book is to describe the natural phenomenon of a thunderstorm using rhythmic language. show less
This is a classic English ghost story, in the vein of "The Golden Arm", where eventually you end up screaming at your unsuspecting vict- uh, child.
Great fun, not much to it than that. If you want to read the story beforehand you can look it up on google.
Great fun, not much to it than that. If you want to read the story beforehand you can look it up on google.
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Statistics
- Works
- 43
- Also by
- 10
- Members
- 1,265
- Popularity
- #20,290
- Rating
- 4.2
- Reviews
- 9
- ISBNs
- 143
- Languages
- 1

















