One day,
When Monty Saury
Was playing in the park,
Right by the roundabout,
His first tooth fell out.
That very night,
The Tooth Fairy came,
To bring him a special game.
Suddenly Monty awoke with a fright,
He could hear a noise,
So he turned on the light.
The Tooth Fairy, who was very small,
Was stuck in a crack
In his bedroom wall.
“Please free me,”
The Tooth Fairy said,
“I have so many homes to inspect,
So many teeth to collect,
So many gifts to bring
To children large and small,
Oh, how did I ever
Get stuck in this wall?
Please help me down,
And I promise you,
I’ll fly you all over town.”
“I’m so sorry,”
Said Monty Saury,
“I’ll be happy to set you free,
But in return,
Please do something for me.
Grant me three wishes,
Like in the story
Of the magic fishes.”
“Certainly not three,”
Said the Tooth Fairy,
“Maybe one,
If it is something
That can be done.”
“OK,” Monty said,
“What I really want to know,
Is what you do with our teeth —
Where do they go?
Where do you fly them to?
I want you to take me there with you.”
“Oh, that is something I could never do,”
Said the Tooth Fairy,
But Monty was as stubborn as a hungry kangaroo,
So finally she had to agree,
Or Monty might never set her free.
It was the middle of the night,
No one was in sight.
So they rode a skycycle
To the asteroid that looked like a chocolate kazoo,
And then they waited
For Spacebus number 22.
It took them past the
Milky Way (which was bright as day),
Then round Einstein’s bend,
To the very end,
Till they reached the planet people call,
“The farthest planet of them all.”
“This planet is our home,”
Said the Tooth Fairy.
“During the day,
We have the light
Of a billion stars,
All the way from here to Mars.
Our days are happy and bright,
But at night,
Our planet turns to face
The other way,
And there’s
Not a star in sight.
“So,
To give our planet light,
At night,
We collect teeth from many girls and boys,
We bring them money, games and toys,
And hang their teeth up very high,
All across our night time sky.”
“The very best teeth are white as snow,
Those are the ones that really glow,
But when a tooth falls out, and it’s yellow or grey,
We sometimes have to throw it away.
(So children, please keep your teeth shiny and white,
So they can make our darkness bright!)”
Rain or shine,
At a quarter to nine,
Every morning and every night,
Eight fairies brush each tooth eight times,
To keep each one so clean and white.
Monty looked up to the skies,
What a sight!
A million teeth were shining bright,
In the middle of the night.
“Wow,”
Said the Tooth Fairy,
Tomorrow is almost now!”
So they took the shortcut home,
Flying past Mars and over the Moon,
And before you could say,
“How now, brown cow,”
Monty was back in his bed, in his room.
On the way,
The Tooth Fairy
Gave Monty
Some little fairy cakes.
Each bite makes
You forget
Where you have been,
Anything you did or said,
Before you went to bed.
When Monty awoke the next morning,
He heard the alarm clock ring.
He had flown to the stars,
But what did he remember? Not a thing!
Since then, every morning and night,
At a quarter to nine,
Monty brushes each tooth eight times,
To the left and to the right,
He keeps them very clean and white.
Once in a while, he looks at the stars,
Up there in the sky,
And smiles a big smile,
But doesn’t know why.
To this very day,
Only you and I know,
Where the teeth really go.
And we won’t tell anyone,
About the million teeth,
Hanging high,
In the sky
Of the planet they call,
“The farthest planet of them all.”
Thank you for reading our book!
If you like it, you might also want to read other children’s books that I’ve written and Rotem Omri has illustrated. For example:
“kenya the can’t garoo meets dr. cluck”
http://www.ourboox.com/books/kenya-cant-garoo-meets-dr-cluck-html/
Read more about me and see ALL my books on Ourboox (I have many)
http://www.ourboox.com/community/drmel/profile/edit/group/1/
Or even better, create a book of your own!!!
Here is a tutorial to help you get started on your own voyage as an Ourboox contributor!!
http://www.ourboox.com/books/create-a-book-ourboox-video-tutorial/
And finally, you can always write me at
Published: Jul 9, 2014
Latest Revision: Feb 25, 2015
Ourboox Unique Identifier: OB-12925
Copyright © 2014