The World's Toughest Book Critics ℠
 
Cover art for LULA'S BREW

LULA'S BREW

Age Range: 4 - 8
An app with a story that feels completely modern even as it eschews nearly all of the iPad's interactivity features, this tale of a witch who dabbles in food (or is she a foodie who happens to be a witch?) feels like it's missing a few ingredients. Read full review
Buy this book from
Buy this app from Apple
From Apple
 
Science Fiction Gets Social (Part 3)
One of the characteristics of great literature is that it says something meaningful about life. Science fiction does that, too, except that the perspective is usually seen from an outsider's viewpoint and is often focused on society in general. read more
Pushing the Sexual Envelope
When it comes to sex and books for teens, the envelope has been expanding for decades. It was only a matter of time before Cath’s grave examination of Ralph in Judy Blume's Forever… opened the door for actual oral sex. Boys have been happily getting blow jobs for the past several years. read more
Paul Theroux’s 'Lower River' Returns to Familiar—if Exotic—Ground
Nostalgia is a killer: It can lull us off guard, lead us into the dangers that come when, deep in age, we romanticize things like a ropeless climb or a seatbeltless swerve around a mountain road and decide to try the foolhardiness of bygone days again. read more
Three’s an Arty Crowd
We all know the refrain, “Money can’t buy everything.” No, but it certainly is nice to have it on hand, just in case. read more
 
LULA'S BREW (reviewed on February 15, 2011)
An app with a story that feels completely modern even as it eschews nearly all of the iPad’s interactivity features, this tale of a witch who dabbles in food (or is she a foodie who happens to be a witch?) feels like it’s missing a few ingredients. Written, illustrated and narrated by Dulemba, who has many printed books to her credit (Soap, Soap, Soap / Jabon, Jabon, Jabon, 2009, etc.), the rhymed narrative features amusing cultural touches parents and older readers will appreciate. While she’s supposed to be studying her potions book, Lula “watched Food Channel instead,” for instance. Lula dreams of having a restaurant and her own cooking show. The rhyming text aims for sophistication (“Gourmand Magazine / Magical Fusion Cuisine”), even if the early use of the word “boogers” feels like a sop to the wet-wipe set. Overall, rhymes and meter often fall flat, making readers wish the author had chosen a prose delivery. Moreover, for all its knowing allusions to foodie culture, the app has no hipster options or interactivity beyond simple page turns (via buttons; swiping by hand doesn’t work). The colored-pencil illustrations are attractive and look good on the iPad’s screen, but the bare-bones-app approach feels disappointing for such a spicy story. (iPad storybook app. 4-8)

Review Posted Online: Jan. 6th, 2011
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15th, 2011
screenshot
screenshot
screenshot
screenshot
screenshot