A small caterpillar hatches out of an egg and is very hungry. Each day, the caterpillar goes out looking for food, finding different things to eat.

Part of the book is a counting story, as the caterpillar eats different numbers of different types of fruit in different numbers. The format of this part of the book is really interesting because each of those pages isn’t a whole page but sections of pages that are different sizes, showing how the amount that the caterpillar eats increases each day.

Also, there are real holes in the pages to show where the caterpillar ate through different types of food. Kids like books with interesting physical features that encourage them to interact with the book as a toy as well as a story. I think that’s part of what has caused this book to have lasting appeal.

The book does also have a story to it about the growth and development of the caterpillar along with the counting part. At the end of the part that counts the number of pieces of fruit the caterpillar eats, the caterpillar eats a bunch of random junk foods and gives himself a stomachache. Eating a green leaf makes him feel better. By this point, the caterpillar is a fat caterpillar who is no longer hungry. At the end of the book, the caterpillar makes a cocoon and turns into a butterfly.

This is a cute picture book that is fun to show to very young children. The counting element is good both for teaching young children and for the children who have already learned to count because they can predict what the caterpillar is going to do next. The unusual format of those pages with the holes also makes the book distinctive.

On the 50th anniversary of the book in 2019, the BBC produced an article about the book’s history and its appeal to generations of young readers.

The book is available to borrow for free online through Internet Archive.

3 thoughts on “The Very Hungry Caterpillar

  1. This was always a favourite of mine. I love insects, so finding stories about them is something I really strived to do as a kid. The Inspector Mantis (a Sherlock Holmes pastiche-I actually made a youtube video on this), and Cricket magazine (a collection of short stories on a variety of subjects, but the characters who helped you with big words and also had a comic of their own were insects (Cricket & his friends) were my biggest reads on this genre.

    Say, did you decide if you were going to borrow my Twin Connection books yet? I was waiting for you to email about that. Thanks–Sean

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      1. Have a look at my youtube video:

        The thing about Inspector Mantis is that it’s not just “Insect Sherlock Holmes”-a lot of the facts given are true to insects (with some exaggerations) The first book came out in 1983 and I LOVED it. The 2nd was like 2005? Even as an adult in my 30s, I loved it too. (The artwork are like paintings, and the same artist came back 20 years later as well as the same author)

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