I really appreciate the good qualities of the chicks. They saw that the book was not theirs. But to share it with your companions, and then try to find the owner.
They are also very orderly. When reading the little red book, all the penguins patiently lined up to read one by one. Recall that when students in my class encounter this situation, they all flock to it. Whoever grabs it first will see it, and those who can't see it will even start work. Alas! You should learn from little penguins.
Penguins do things very quickly. Their "star-setting" is similar to our campus collective broadcast exercise, and penguins put out thirteen or four "star" patterns of different sizes in a few seconds, which are neat and spectacular. Look at our classmates again, every time we stand in line to do exercises, we are always dawdling, and we haven't stood in line from beginning to end. What a shame!
I also want to criticize Santa Claus. If he didn't sleep, the little red book wouldn't be lost, and the penguins wouldn't have to go to so much trouble to find the owner. God deer is too naughty, just like our classmates, and always yearns for a trip to the South Pole.
I think this author, Angelica Stubner, is very creative in the design of books. He hangs a small book, the Red Book, outside the book, which makes readers more interested in and like this book.