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Reviewed by Jack Magnus for Readers' Favorite
Tac and Tuk is a children's animal story book written by Carolee Wells Henney and illustrated by Heather Ewing Klose. Tac and Tuk are ground squirrel cousins who live on the prairie in Texas. Their colony is a large one with about fifty families who live in burrows underground. Tac likes to explore and have adventures, and she would love to see the Rocky Mountains one day. Tuk likes to play in the tunnels and takes his job as a lookout for the colony very seriously. One day, when Tac couldn't get Tuk to go play with her, she decided to explore and came upon a small pond. She heard a strange noise there which scared her at first, but then she began to think that the sound was sad. When she ventured out to look, she saw a huge and beautiful bird, the largest she had ever seen, but it had plastic soda can loops wrapped tightly around one of its wings.
Carolee Wells Henney's children's animal book, Tac and Tuk, may get kids and their parents involved in collecting the insidious six-pack plastic rings that seem to be everywhere and have caused untold damage to wildlife. This story illustrates what happens all too frequently to wild creatures who come in contact with them. Henney's tale also introduces the ground squirrel to children and gives a marvelous presentation on their communal habitat and behavior. Heather Ewing Klose's illustrations are grand. My favorite picture has to be the one in which Tuk is standing above the burrows, and there are dozens of ground squirrels spread throughout the tunnels underneath him, but each panel is so much fun, it's hard to pick just one. Tac and Tuk is an excellent introduction for children to wildlife and the impact people have on their environment, and it's an exciting and well-written tale to boot. It's most highly recommended.