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EVERYONE IS YAWNING

Irresistibly somniferous.

One animal after another yawns with the lift of a flap…even the small child at the end.

A “yawner” in the best sense, this parade of sleepyheads isn’t just a series of variations on the same motion—it offers a mix of repetition and low-key interactive surprises. Each double-page spread features a big, simple, familiar creature whose rounded muzzle is a flap. In most cases, lifting the flap reveals a wide-open mouth—but partway through is an arctic fox who starts out gaping so that the flap action goes down rather than up. Similarly, along with patterned observations that each animal is “yawning,” occasional anxiety-reducing comments like “What a funny tongue!” or “Look at those funny teeth!” join interactive suggestions that young viewers grunt along with the piggy and help the hippo yawn three times. Finally, following an artful comment that the little turtle is ready for bed, a bald, light-brown–skinned toddler (“Is the little child going to bed too?”) yawns and goes “off…to…sleep.” On a final gatefold the entire cast nestles together in snoozeville.

Irresistibly somniferous. (Pop-up picture book. 2-8)

Pub Date: Aug. 9, 2016

ISBN: 978-1-60537-227-3

Page Count: 34

Publisher: Clavis

Review Posted Online: Aug. 1, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2016

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CRISPIN'S RAINY DAY

A well-written fantasy adventure for lovers of pirates and haters of siblings.

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Crispin escapes to a world of pirates and dragons in Dickison’s fantasy-adventure novel.

Crispin, a boy around 10 years old, who is white with light-brown spiky hair, has a sister named Rose. She may want to play on a rainy day, but Crispin is already out the door and jumping into a puddle that transports him straight to another world. He joins a frog pirate crew and vows to find a magical sword that so far has eluded his grasp. “Now weigh the anchor, hoist the flag, the plans have all been made: Today we search the seven seas to find the LIGHTNING BLADE!” But before they can even cast off, Rose floats down from the sky on an umbrella. Crispin is against her being on the ship, but her offer of snacks and decluttering is enough to buy her passage. As she works, the pirates sail from whirlpool to jungle and from Lava Peak to Ocean’s End to seek out the missing weapon. Just as Crispin begins to accept Rose’s presence, a red dragon kidnaps her. Dickison’s debut as an author/illustrator has it all: a relatable sibling relationship, powerful treasure, and even cannibals. His depictions of Rose and Crispin in a world of lush color echo the magic of Studio Ghibli films like My Neighbor Totoro (1988). The rhyming couplets provide the story with a traditional lilt that lends it the timelessness of a classic picture book.

A well-written fantasy adventure for lovers of pirates and haters of siblings.

Pub Date: Aug. 13, 2024

ISBN: 9781591281078

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Canonball Books

Review Posted Online: Aug. 22, 2024

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IT'S NOT HANSEL AND GRETEL

A twisted take on an old standard that just may have readers rewriting their own favorites.

An omniscient narrator battles Hansel and Gretel for control of the story…and loses, to readers’ delight.

At the start, this seems like the standard fairy tale, but it’s not long before the siblings are contradicting the narrator: “What kind of person SAVES bread crumbs?” Gretel asks, and Hansel adds, “It’s a time of great famine. If there are bread crumbs left, we eat them.” These cheeky retorts only grow more numerous as the tale continues. Gretel also flexes her feminist muscles, demanding the title be “Gretel and Hansel” and that she not do chores while Hansel gets fattened up on a candy diet (or swells from a sensitivity to strawberries, as it turns out: “Food allergies are NOT a joke”). Eventually, the narrator gives up trying to fix the tale and gives the two full control, and things quickly get out of hand: Both end up sporting mustaches, there’s a unicorn named Fluffybottom, and the kids are reunited with their completely innocent parents. Taylor’s digital illustrations take the loony text several steps farther, and readers will enjoy the cameos from characters from other familiar tales. Hansel, Gretel, and their parents present white, and the witch is literally white, with a long, pink nose.

A twisted take on an old standard that just may have readers rewriting their own favorites. (Picture book. 4-8)

Pub Date: March 1, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-5039-0294-7

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Two Lions

Review Posted Online: Nov. 20, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2018

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