Dibs, written by Laura Gehl and
illustrated by Marcin Piwowarski, is the story of two brothers. Julian calls
“dibs” so frequently that his baby brother Clancy ends up saying “dibs” as his
very first word. Things get out of control when Clancy starts calling dibs on a
bakery, an airplane, and even the White House! But when Clancy gets trapped in
space, it is Julian who needs to harness the power of dibs to rescue his little
brother.
1.
If you could call dibs on ANYTHING, the way Clancy does, what would you call
dibs on? Why?
2.
Julian gets frustrated when Clancy doesn’t follow the “rules” of Dibs. Even
though these rules are not written down, most kids know you can call dibs on
the biggest cookie but not on a whole bakery. You can call dibs on sitting in
the window seat in an airplane, but you can’t call dibs on a whole airplane.
Think about rules in your life. What rules at home or school do you wish you
could break? What rules do you wish other people followed? Do you have a
sibling, cousin, or friend who breaks rules? How do you feel about that when it
happens?
3.
Some kids who read the book Dibs already
know the expression “calling dibs,” and some kids have never heard the
expression before. Make a list of expressions that you know. Which of these
expressions do you actually use when you talk to your friends?
4.
Look at your list of expressions that you know from #3. Can you imagine how a
kid could take one of those expressions too far, the way Clancy takes dibs too
far in the book Dibs? How could you
turn that into a story? For example, think about the expression “An apple a day
keeps the doctor away.” What if a kid decided that she would eat ten apples—or
a hundred apples—or a thousand apples—every day so that she would never, ever
get sick? And then she ate so many apples that it actually made her sick! Or
maybe she turned into an apple and then her grandma wanted to turn her into
apple pie! Take one of the expressions from your list and write a story in
which a kid takes the expression too far.
Bio: Laura
Gehl is the author of picture books including One Big Pair of
Underwear (Charlotte Zolotow Highly Commended Title, International Literacy
Association Honor Book, Booklist Books for Youth Editors’ Choice); Hare and
Tortoise Race Across Israel, And Then Another Sheep Turned Up, and Koala Challah (all PJ
Library selections); the Peep and Egg series (Parents’ Choice
Recommendation, Amazon Editors’ Pick, Children’s Choice Book Award Finalist); My
Pillow Keeps Moving (Junior Library Guild selection, NYPL Best Books of
2018 selection); and I Got a Chicken for
my Birthday (Kirkus Best Picture Books of 2018 selection). 2019 releases
include Except When They Don’t (Little Bee), Dibs! (Lerner), Juniper Kai: Super Spy (Two Lions); Judge Juliette (Sterling); Always Looking Up: A Story of Astronomer
Nancy Grace Roman (Whitman); and the Baby Scientist series (HarperCollins).
Laura lives in Chevy Chase, Maryland, with her husband and four children.
Visit her online at www.lauragehl.com.
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