The Snail and the Whale

by | Jun 28, 2025 | books | 0 comments

The Snail and the Whale
by Julia Donaldson
New York: Puffin Books, 2003.

Suggested age and interest level: Ages 3 to 7 years

Editions: Hardcover, Paperback, eBook, Large Print, Braille, and Magnetic Book. Also an Audio book available on iTunes.

Languages: English, Arabic, Chinese, German, Italian, Russian, and Turkish

Awards: Winner, 2004 Spoken Book gold award for best audiobook for ages 6 and under.

Topics to Explore: Animal rescue, Beaches and seashore, Friendship, Geography, Ocean creatures and habitats, Whales

Strategies for Book Talk: Consider pausing only minimally during the read-aloud so that the brilliant use of language crafted in rhythm and rhyme isn’t interrupted. However, pausing for children’s input and to define a word are always suggested. On a second read-though, target more specified skills you want to support.

Skills to Build:
Concepts of Print
Semantics: Vocabulary, Beginning Concepts (Part-Whole Relationships),  Homonyms, Synonyms, Associations, Adjectives, Attributes, Prepositions
Grammar and syntax: Two- and 3-word utterances, Noun + Verb agreement, Singular and Plural forms of nouns, Syntax structures (past, present and advanced)
Language literacy (a.k.a. Language discourse): Relating personal experiences, Sequencing events, Cause-and-effect relationships, Predictions, Problem solving, Drawing inferences, Verbal expression (Giving explanations), Compare and contrast, Answering Why questions, Discussion
Pragmatic social language:  Nonverbal communication, Being a friend
Fluency
Articulation, W, F and V
Phonological Awareness

Summary: A tiny snail with an “itchy foot” on a soot-filled rock overlooking a busy harbor has a wonderful dream. So, she advertises for a ride around the world. Her dreams come true when, after writing an ad with her silvery snail trail, she is invited to climb aboard the tail of a humpback whale. What a wonderful whale to take her to far off lands, to the South Pole’s icebergs with penguins and seals, and tropical islands with monkeys, palm trees, and spewing volcanoes. But when the whale gets pushed too close to land, he gets beached on an empty shore. Find out how the tiny snail saves the day with her courage and ingenious snail trail that rounds up the community. Together they all try to preserve the giant sea mammal until the tide comes in again and he’s heading back to port. Waiting for them is whole “flock on the rock” and they all climb aboard for a new adventure to end this endearing tale.

Before the read-aloud, encourage children to share what they know about the cover illustration, engaging in Book Talk as you support the following skills:

Vocabulary, Attributes, Discussion, Relating personal experiences

As you read the words of the title and author on the cover, encourage descriptions of the story’s setting, identifying the toucan perched on a palm tree, and parrot flying over the sea.

To work on vocabulary, talk about the whale and how it inhales air when it comes to the surface of the water using a blowhole, distinguishing it from fish. Describe how the whale blows a powerful burst of air from its blowhole, and that condensation from colder air outside creates the mist, making it look as if it is spewing water. After it has exhaled, then it inhales air and can swim under the water with this air until it is time to come back up again and repeat the process.

Name other attributes of this marine mammal, like its size, color, and special dorsal fin on his back (not visible in this illustration) that identifies him as a humpback. Then identify the tiny creature, barely seen at the tip of his tail – the snail.

As you discuss snails and their features, talk about how they leave a silvery, glistening snail trail behind them when they are on the move. This helps them navigate and propel their movement over rough, dry surfaces.

The snail trail is key to understanding the story. Ask children to relate their own experiences observing snails. Ask –

  •  Where did you see the snail?
  •  What do you notice about the snail?
  •  Have you ever seen a snail trail but no snail?
  •  What does its trail tell you?

Talk about the difference between a sea snail (like the one in the story) and a garden snail. For example, garden snails have lungs and sea snails have gills, so they can breathe under water.

During the read-aloud, model, scaffold, expand on, and recast language as you engage in children in Book Talk. Consider minimal interruptions in the flow of the rhyming verse on the first read-through, then pause for lengthier exchanges when you revisit the pages after the entire book has been read.

Perspective-taking, Vocabulary, Syntax structures, Idioms, Homonyms

On the first page turn, pause for talk about the setting.

To work on perspective-taking, point out the single tiny snail on the rock overlooking the harbor. Make the story come alive by asking –

  • What can the snail see from the rock?
  • How is her view different from those on the little boat coming into the harbor?
  • How is it different from that of the seagull perched on top of the old pilings?

Vocabulary includes –

  • Port
  • Dock
  • Cranes
  • Tugboat
  • Ships
  • Anchor
  • Seagulls
  • Lichens (on rocks)
  • Lighthouse
  • Shore
  • Buoy
  • Metal barrels (oil drums)
  • Pilings (providing a habitat for marine life)

To work on vocabulary and syntax formations, model use of the words in sentences and connect them to other words. Then scaffold and/or expand the child’s constructions, such as –

  • Big ships are docked in the harbor.
  • Cranes lift cargo (off the ships).
  • Lichen grows on the rocks (and pilings).
  • The seagull eats lichen (off the rock).

and so on.

To work on idioms and homonyms, talk about the expression itchy foot that is so important to the meaning of the story. Share that the expression means longing to travel or do something different. Ask yes/no questions to insure understanding. For example, ask –

  • Does this expression mean the snail’s foot itches and she needs to scratch it?
  • Does it mean she is itching to travel and see the world?
  • Does the little snail long to set foot on other lands?

Share that a snail’s underside is called a foot. Which gives the idiom a homonym aspect. What does foot mean when referring to a sea snail? 

Concepts of print, Idioms

On a page turn, see lots of snails on the soot-covered rock in the harbor. Talk about the shells on their back. Point out and run your finger along the snail trail as you read the text –

  • This is the trail
  • Of the tiny snail,
  • A silvery trail that looped and curled
  • And said, “Ride wanted around the world.”

To work on concepts of print, show the rock on which the snail created a message with her silvery trail. Talk about how she formed the loopy lines of her snail trail into letters – perfect for handwriting. Explain how the loopy letters say something in writing. They are talk written down. Ask –

  • What did the snail want to say to the ships’ captains?
  • What did she want to ask them?
  • How was this clever?

Encourage children to be on the lookout for another place in the story where they might see the snail use her trail to write a message.

To work on idioms, talk about the meaning of the words, hitch a ride, as in getting a ride from someone for free, especially since they’re going where you want to go. They are especially important words to the meaning of the story.

Encourage use of the idiom, both within the context of the story and within children’s own lives.

Part-Whole relationships, Prepositions

On a page turn, see the whale swimming under the nighttime stars. The center part of its body (its dorsal fin) is hidden, submerged under water. The tail appears separately above the water.

To work on part-whole relationships and prepositions, ask children to identify the whale’s parts. Then connect the parts by identifying where each is located. Use prepositions such as under, beneath, in, above, and on top of in relation to the water and context of the story.

In the sidebar illustration, identify the whale’s tail as it rests against the rock. As the tiny snail climbs on, ask where she is and where the rest of the whale’s “immensely” long body is located. Continue working on prepositions in relation to the tail, the rock, and snail that help children express meaning within the context of the story. 

Two- and 3-word utterances, Vocabulary (Adjectives and Verbs),
Plural forms of nouns,
Syntax formations (including advanced syntactic structures),
N+ V agreement, Prepositional phrases

On the next five page turns, see all the places the giant whale takes his tiny passenger. Look for opportunities to engage in the rich text of the rhyming verse to support a variety of communication skills.

To encourage early utterances, invite children to chime in on portions the verse with repeatable phrases, such as –

  • tiny snail
  • tail of the whale
  • snail on his tail
  • in the sea
  • waves splash
  • running a race
  • close to shore

Then expand on the utterances to add more words, such as –

  • the tiny snail on the rock
  • the big tail of the whale
  • the whale with a snail on his tail

and so on.

To work on vocabulary development, including adjectives and verbs, focus on the author’s great use of adjectives to describe the –

  • towering icebergs
  • fiery mountains
  • golden sands

and the verbs that tell what the waves were doing as they –

  • arched
  • crashed
  • foamed
  • frolicked
  • sprayed
  • splashed….

…the tiny snail.

Encourage use of the word in ways that connect it to another word in the story, such as –

  • The waves arched over the whale’s tail.
  • The waves crashed on top of the whale.
  • The waves foamed as they crashed on top of the water.

To work on syntax structures, talk about the action in the story as it is depicted in the images. Point out a favorite creature and combine it with the action taking place on the page.

  • whale swimming
  • whale carrying (the snail)
  • penguins watching
  • seals sliding
  • dolphins playing
  • fish swimming
  • volcano spewing
  • monkey climbing

Encourage advanced syntax structures by creating prepositional phrases, such as –

  • The whale is swimming ____(e.g., alongside, in front of, between) the icebergs in the sea.
  • The whale is carrying the snail ______ (e.g., on top of, on the tip of) his tail.
  • The penguins are looking _____ (out, toward, across) the sea at the whale.

To work on N+V agreement, highlight the difference between pages where text begins with the same pattern, but grammatic constructions are determined by either the singular or plural subject. For example –

  • This is the snail…
  • This is the rock….
  • These are the other snails….
  • This is the sea…
  • These are the waves….
  • These are the caves…
  • This is the sky…

Pause at the illustration showing the whale off the shore of the tropical island to work on singular and plural nouns and N+V agreement. For example –

For: Toucan/Toucans

  • The toucan sits in the tree
  • The toucans sit on the tree

For: Crab/Crabs

  • The crab holds hands (pinchers) with the other crab.
  • The crabs hold hands (pinchers)

For: Tree /Trees

  • The tree stands on the shore
  • The trees stand on the shore

For: Shell/Shells

  • There is a shell on the beach.
  • There are many shells on the beach.

Vocabulary, Sequencing events, Cause-and effect relationships, Verbal expression (Giving explanations), Answering Why questions

On the next two page turns, see enthusiastic boaters racing at sea, forcing the poor whale into shallower water.  And then

 the whale lost his way.

As the whale now lies on shore, out of his element, he spews ocean water from his blowhole. But he is stuck!  Where will more water come from? The story reads –

This is the tide, slipping away.

On a page turn, read –

And this is the whale lying beached in a bay.

To work on vocabulary, invite Book Talk about the meaning of beached as it pertains to an aquatic animal. Encourage use of the word in descriptions of the whale’s predicament.

To work on sequencing events, consider that before children can express cause-and-effect relationships, they must be able to verbally sequence story events. Ask what happened in this part of the story, scaffolding with words first, and then.  For example –

  • First the boaters got in his way.
  • Then he had to swim closer to shore in shallow water.
  • Then the waves went out to sea (the tide went out).
  • And then the whale got stuck on the beach!

To structure cause-and effect relationships about the sequence of actions, ask children what caused the whale to become beached. Scaffold sentences with connector words so, that caused, and because to help construct the relationships of the events, such as in –

  • The boats got in his way, so he got off course/had to in a different direction.
  • The whale got beached because he had to swim too close to the shore.
  • It was the tide going out that caused him to get beached on shore.

To work on giving explanations and answering Why questions, engage in Book Talk about the problem that develops in the story.

Talk about ocean tides and how they bring water toward the land during one stage. In the next stage the water goes back out to sea. Then encourage language formations that explain how whales need deep water to swim in. For example, ask –

  • How could a whale end up on the beach?
  • Why is it that he is not able to swim back out to sea?
  • Why does the story say the water is “slipping away?”

Scaffold and expand on answers such as –

  • The tide moves back toward the sea so there’s no water beneath him.
  • When there’s no water beneath him, the whale’s belly touches the sand.
  • His flippers can’t pull at the water to move him forward.

Concepts of print, Predictions

On a page turn, see how the courageous little snail attempts to solve the problem. After she exclaims, “I’ve got it!” she crawls to a schoolhouse where the children and teacher are surprised by –

A silvery trail saying “Save the whale.”

To work on concepts of print, point to the blackboard with the snail trail message. Ask children to recall how she wrote her last message on the soot-filled rock in the harbor. Show how she formed the loopy lines of her trail into handwriting (rather than printing). Explain how letters say something in writing.

To work on making predictions, ask children what might happen next. Based on what transpired after writing her last message on the rock, what might happen now? (E.g., People will read it.)

Social Pragmatics (Nonverbal communication), Sentence constructions

On a page turn, see the school children shocked and amazed at seeing the snail’s message on their blackboard.

To work on nonverbal communication, talk about the actions and expressions of the characters, including the teacher. Talk about what it says about their thoughts and feelings. For example –

  • The girl is standing up out of her chair. She’s pointing. Her mouth is open. She dropped her crayon on the floor.  She must be –
  •      startled
  •     amazed
  •     shocked
  •     …thinking this can’t be true!
  •     …thinking, no way!
  •     …thinking, I can’t believe a snail wrote that!

On a page turn, see the children running toward the beach and the red emergency vehicles with their lights flashing. Support responses such as –

  • The boy is running with his arms out and his mouth open.
  • He’s probably saying “Hold on! We’re coming to rescue you.”
  • The girl behind him is running with her hands up in the air.
  • She is worried about the whale.
  • She is hoping they will get there in time to save him.
  • The boy behind her is holding the tiny snail as he runs with his schoolmates.
  • He’s probably being careful not to hurt it.

On the opposite page, emergency crews and villagers help dig sand out from under the whale and hose him down to keep him cool. Support children in interpreting the actions and expressions of people trying to help, especially the little boy still holding the tiny snail.

To work on syntax constructions, use all the action taking place on shore to save the whale in targeting various syntactic structures.

Sequencing events, Part-whole relationships, Prepositions, Syntax constructions

On the last two page turns, see the happy whale, once again blowing bursts of air from his blowhole that turn to spray and mist as he swims back to the harbor with his tiny friend. There they tell their story to a flock of snails and invite them to come aboard for more adventures.

To work on sequencing events and syntax constructions, review the text that reads –

  • And the whale and the snail
  • Told their wonderful tale
  • Of shimmering ice and coral caves,
  • And shooting stars and enormous waves,
  • And of how the snail, so small and frail,
  • with her looping, curling, silvery tail,
  • Saved the life of the humpback whale.

Ask children to tell the story the way the whale and snail would have told it, sequencing events with connector words first, next, and then. Help structure the story by asking –

  • How did they start off?
  • What happened first?
  • What did they see?
  • Where did they go next?

To work on part-whole relationships, see the sidebar illustration, as it appeared in the beginning page of the book – only this time, with lots of little snails climbing onto the whale’s tail! Ask children to identify the whale’s tail and locate where the rest of his body is. Predict how the whale will be seen differently in the next picture.

To work on prepositions and syntax formations, talk about the action taking place in relation to the whale’s tail, the rock, and snails that help express meaning within the context of the story.

 

After the read aloud, pause for your audience reflect on the story and ask general questions about their opinions, such as –

  • What did you especially like about this story?
  • What page did you especially enjoy looking at?
  • Was there something you didn’t like about the story?

Revisit pages in the story that can provide added meaning and work on the skills previously outlined as well as additional communication objectives such as –

Discussion, Social pragmatics (Being a friend)

The message in this story is that no matter how small you may be, you can make a difference.  Talk about how the tiny snail overcame her initial thoughts of being “terribly small” and instead found a way to make a positive effect.

Consider holding a discussion on friendship. A whale and a snail are unlikely friends. But once the connection is made, they become steadfast companions. Ask thoughtful questions about how their friendship formed, as in –

  • How did the whale initiate being a friend to the tiny snail?
  • What did they share in common?
  • What kinds of things might they have talked about on their travels?

Then ask how they showed friendship toward each other. For example  –

  • What did tiny snail do to show her appreciation for her friend?
  • What did the humpback whale do to show his appreciation for his friend?

Then ask children to apply the principals to their own lives. For example –

What are some good ways to make a friend? (E.g., Offer to do something for someone, offer to help if they have a problem, and so on.)

Sequencing events

In reviewing the pages of the story, support children in describing the events in sequential order, using connecting words first, next, then, after that, finally, and so on. For example,

  • First the snail watched the boats in the harbor and wanted to travel with them.
  • Then she wrote a message that she wanted a ride around the world.
  • Next, a whale offered her a ride.
  • Then she climbed on his tail.
  • After that,….

and so on.

Problem solving

Review the pages where speedboats unintentionally push the whale into shallower water. Showing the page with the huge whale on the sand, ask,

  •     What is the problem in the story? (The whale got beached.)
  •     What needed to happen? (The whale needed to get off of the sand.)
  •      How was the problem solved? (The snail wrote a message with its trail to save the whale.)

Continue Book Talk about how the whole community helped in solving the problem of saving the beached whale.

Answering Why questions, Giving explanations, Drawing inferences

Review the pages where the school children and emergency vehicles race to the scene of the beached whale. Excavators help dig the whale out of the sand and machines with extension ladders pump ocean water over him.

To work on answering Why questions, ask –

  • Why are emergency vehicles racing to the beach?
  • Why are excavators needed to help the whale?
  • Why are the fireman hosing off the whale?

Expand and scaffold responses containing connector words such as so that and because.

To work on giving explanations and drawing inferences, ask questions such as –

  •  How are the children helping the beached whale?
  •  How did the rescue vehicles and excavators get on the scene?
  •  How was the whale with the snail able to swim away?                            

Fluency

To work on fluency techniques, use the metaphor of the mist from the whale’s blowhole, his exhale of air, to work on breathing exercises and speaking on a steady airstream.

Talk about whales as mammals, that they breathe in and exhale air just like we do. Review the section in Before the read-aloud under the vocabulary heading for an explanation of how the whale’s exhalation is actually made up of air, not water.

Use the metaphor as well as the wonderful verse with great rhythm to demonstrate and practice easy starts, light contacts, speaking on a steady breath stream, and so on.

The repetitive story structure is ideal for initiating techniques with sentence starters. For example,

  • This is the whale that ______.
  • This is the sea that ________.
  • This is the sky that ________.

As you turn the pages to revisit the story, point to the story features and model sentence starters with steady air flow as you begin –

  • This is the ______
  • These are the ____

To work on healthy self-perceptions, talk about what the tiny snail does to save the whale. The story shows that that no matter how small you are, you can make a difference.

A snail doesn’t speak, of course. But that doesn’t stop her from attempting to communicate her message. She draws on her courage and uses the abilities she has to call for the whale’s rescue.

While she could have focused her thoughts on being too “terribly small”, instead she sees herself as being able to make a positive effect.

By talking about the tiny snail’s courage and belief that she can be effective, you can segue to the child’s own self-acceptance. It isn’t necessary to speak perfectly. Even though you may be fearful of speaking in certain situations, believing in yourself that you can communicate your message, no matter how, is what matters

Ask what the snail might have said if she could have spoken words. Then segue to the child’s own self-acceptance. Consider asking –

  • In what ways are you an effective communicator?

For any child, no matter what the objective, believing in yourself as an effective communicator, no matter how you speak, is what truly matters.

Articulation

Given the rich use of language in the text, the book offers opportunities to work on almost any phoneme! It is particularly useful for the lip rounding movements for W. The text is also well suited for working on fricatives F and V.

To work on W, demonstrate, model and practice production of the word whale on every page, along with -:
Words with W in the text: whale, water, waves, wanted, (ride wanted), world, wanted around the world, wide, world is wide, towering, who, wiggle, wonderful, wild, how, away and how.

Words with F in the text: foot, itchy foot, flock, sniffed, free, fiery, foamed, frolicked, free, filled, flashing, frightening, fail, fetching, firemen, safe, safely, wonderful, frail, and after.
Words with F to use with the illustrations: fun, and wharf

Words with V in the text: volcano, vast, villagers, and wave
Words with V to use in the illustrations: very, vessel, evening, travel, move, moving, over, and above.

Phonological Awareness

The superb rhyming text not only tells a complete story, its constituent words are ideal for PA activities, especially at the earlier levels.

Depending on where the child’s abilities fall on the PA spectrum, you may wish to start with the games provided here at the beginning levels, Initial Sound Awareness and Rhyming  Awareness.

NOTE: The full spectrum of PA is not within the scope of this book treatment. For book treatments that encompass the full range of PA, look through the PA Catalog of Books Are for Talking, Too! (Fourth edition), where you’ll find activities across the entire  PA spectrum to use with easy-to-find picture books.

 NOTICE: ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. The following phonological awareness games are copyrighted material from the 3rd and 4th editions of Books Are for Talking, Too!  They are the intellectual property of the author/publisher. They are used here in Book Talk by the author/publisher for educational purposes only. Duplication of this material for commercial use is prohibited without explicit permission from author/publisher.

 Rhyming Awareness Level

Play: Finish-the-Rhyme. Children supply the rhyming word left out at the end of a familiar verse. Provide the initial phoneme cue and picture prompts if needed.  Say –

This is the tale of the tiny ______ (snail).

And the great big, gray-blue humpback _______ (whale).

This is the tail

Of the humpback _____(whale).

He held it out of the starlit sea

And said to the snail, “Come sail with _____ (me).

Begin with shorter verses and more familiar pages until children are successful finishing the rhyme.

Play: Rhyme-It-Again. Children identify the rhyming word heard after a rhyming set is given. For example,

   After ending the rhyming verse, reiterate the rhyming word –

   Say –

  • That’s right. Tail rhymes with w _____ (whale).
    That’s right. Sea rhymes with m _____ (e)

 Play: Do they Rhyme? Children determine if word sets rhyme or do not rhyme. For example,

    Say,

  •      whale, snail
  •      Do they rhyme? (Yes)

Say,

  •  trail, sail
    Do they rhyme? (Yes)

   Say,

  •  whale, sand
    Do they rhyme? (No)

Some rhyming word pairs from the text include –

  •  soot, foot
  •  rock, dock
  •  sighed, wide
  •  foot, put
  •  curled, world
  •  night, bright
  •  long, song
  •  caves, waves
  •  sea, free
  •  crashed, splashed
  •  fins, grins
  •  lightening, frightening
  •  land, sand
  •  all, small
  •  race, place
  • roar, shore

Play: Make-a-Rhyme. Children supply another rhyming word, either after a rhyming word from the story is presented or after a set of two rhyming words is presented. Accept any rhyming nonsense word. For example,

   Say.

  • rock, dock
    Do they rhyme? (Yes)
    What’s another word that rhymes with rock? (e.g., sock clock, lock, knock, etc.)

Initial Sound Awareness Level – Alliteration

Play: Same-Sound. Children identify whether two words (or three-word strings) selected from the text begin with the same sound. For example –

Say,

  • sea, sand
    Do they start with the same sound? (Yes)

Say,

  • whale, world
    Do they start with the same sound? (Yes)

Say ,

  • trail, snail
    Do they start with the same sound? (No)

Continue with word pairs and strings provided below. Intersperse a word from a matched set with one from another set to create a non-alliterative pair.

  • whale, waves
  • wiggle, wide
  • snail, small
  • foot, foamed,
  • play, pool
  • land, looping
  • ride, ring, rock
  • tiny, tide, travel
  • cave, cool, curling
  • wanted, world, whale
  • stars, sunny, small,
  • silvery, squirting, spraying
  • looping, land, lightening
  • shimmer, sharks, school
  • blue, beached, big, board, bay
  • frolicked, flashing, frightening, firemen

Play: Say-the-Sound. Children listen to a series of words taken from the text and produce the initial sound common to each word. For example –

Ask,

  • What sound do you hear at the beginning of –
    tiny, tide, and travel?
    Hear it. Say it.
    That’s right. T is the sound at the beginning of tiny, tide, and travel

Continue the game with words of the text provided above, grouped according to their initial sound.

Once children are successful at these levels, continue to work on the next levels in the hierarchy of Phonological Awareness. Try structuring your own activities with suitable words from the text for all the specified PA levels. By focusing on each level of the continuum in this systematic way, the child will eventually achieve the final stages of phonemic awareness.

Note: For book treatments that encompass the full range of phonological awareness (PA) skills, check out the Phonological Awareness Catalog in Books Are for Talking, Too! (4th Ed.). You’ll get tables showing the hierarchy in the development of PA, and a whole range of activities along with instructions and word lists to use with the easy-to-find picture books.

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Additional Resources for The Snail and the Whale:

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