Review: Bin Chicken
What do meat pies, hot chips and the land of the Pharaohs have in common? As it turns out, quite a lot thanks to a curious looking, bald-headed bird with stilt-like legs and a beak that arcs like an oversized hairclip. The Straw-necked Ibis is an instantly recognisable suburban bird to even the youngest of humans thanks to its ungainly appearance and potent guano pong. Yet this hilarious tribute to one of our most misunderstood rubbish bin visitors, allows the humble Ibis to take on a glorious new role.
Mother Ibis nests high above her
suburban kingdom in a palm tree that is home to three adorable fluffy chicks.
Despite the eclectic furnishings of their treetop home, the chicks learn from
their mother not only how to survive in this modern world but gain a sense of
their ancestry and history. For you see, their ancestors used to grace the
banks of the Nile in Egypt and were once regarded regally rather than in
distain. So when did it go so awry and Ibis became synomous with the term, Bin Chicken?
Through lilting rhyming verse and rainbow
coloured pictures, co-authors, Kate and Jol Temple and illustrator Ronojoy
Ghosh, shed new light on this bird’s story. Comically captured moments in Ibis’s’
day show her scrounging through bins and rubbish piles in search of tasty
morsels. Other kerbside bird buddies admonish her disgusting and unhealthy
behaviour. They are crude and brutal in their observations giving rise to all
manner of derogatory names. Unable to appreciate her heritage, they do not
understand her behaviour is merely a desire to keep her chicks from going
hungry and a testimony of her ability to adapt in ever changing times and
habitats.
Although gorgeously humorous, this
tale suggests a deeper context that we should never judge a book or bird by its
covering…or smell. One can never be certain how another ended up in the
situation they are in or what they have to do to survive it. It all boils down
to making judgements based on perspective and exercising tolerance.
Bin Chicken is an entertaining and timely pertinent
picture book that I hope promotes awareness and understanding. Smiles are
already assured.
Title: Bin Chicken
Authors: Kate & Jol Temple
Illustrator: Ronojoy Ghosh
Publisher: Scholastic Press
Publication Date: May 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781743830048
For ages: 3+
Type: Picture Book
Buy the Book: Boomerang
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