Kirkus Star
THE KIRKUS STAR
Awarded to Books of Exceptional Merit

BROWSE BOOK REVIEWS




Children's and Teen: 6 - 8 years old


Cover art for WORMS FOR LUNCH?
CHILDREN'S
Released: March 1, 2011
by Leonid Gore, illustrated by Leonid Gore

"Sure to be a popular choice for storytimes, with its short sentences and simple vocabulary, this is also a solid choice for beginning readers. (Picture book. 3-7)"
"Who eats worms for lunch?" Read full book review >
Cover art for BANANA MOON
CHILDREN'S
Released: May 1, 1998
by Janet Marshall, illustrated by Janet Marshall

"The pages of the book are thick and coated, making them durable and easy for small fingers to turn. (Picture book. 4-8)"
Marshall (Look Once, Look Twice, 1995, etc.) uses die-cut illustrations as a tease, for objects glimpsed on the other side of a hole are not what they appear: Candy canes turn out to be the sails of sailboats, and salt-water taffy is transformed into the whorls of a turtle's shell. Read full book review >
Cover art for NOODLES
CHILDREN'S
Released: May 31, 1996
by Sarah Weeks, illustrated by David Carter

"This product's shelf life is reduced only slightly by its inherent fragility; still, this is a hearty feast. (Picture book. 3-8)"
 Noodles ($15.95; May 31, 1996; 20 pp.; 0-694-00842-7): A rare product indeed: a novelty item that doesn't rest on gimmickry, but balances artistic and literary content with eye-popping surprises. Read full book review >
Cover art for THE WIDE-MOUTHED FROG
CHILDREN'S
Released: March 1, 1996
by Keith Faulkner, illustrated by Jonathan Lambert

"More durable and economical than many of its type, this one is also great fun. (Picture book/folklore. 2-6)"
 An effervescent pop-up version of the familiar tale of the wide-mouthed frog who blithely asks each animal he meets what it likes to eat, including an alligator who says that he eats wide- mouthed frogs. Read full book review >
Cover art for THE RED DRAGON
CHILDREN'S
Released: Oct. 1, 1993
by Stephen Wyllie, illustrated by Jonathan Allen

"Even without the clever paper engineering, Allen's brash caricatures and bright colors make this an entertaining offering. (Picture book. 4-8)"
 A fairly sturdy, unusually well-designed ``3-D Picture Book with Press-Out Disguises,'' with a somewhat predictable story that's still of markedly better quality than most pop-ups. Read full book review >
Cover art for SAM'S SANDWICH
CHILDREN'S
Released: Sept. 1, 1991
by David Pelham, illustrated by David Pelham

"Guaranteed to compel attention. (Picture book. 4-9)"
 Encased in thick boards to simulate slices of bread, a comic novelty: deftly phrased verse describes a sandwich Sam stacks for his innocent sister, each layer (lettuce, cheese, etc.) hiding a creature within a clever foldout (``...to really make her squirm/Sam dropped in a wriggly...[worm]''), the whole truly resembling a fat booby trap of a sandwich. Read full book review >