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GREGORY GRIGGS AND OTHER NURSERY RHYME PEOPLE

Lobel delights with his selections as much as his illustrations in these 35 lesserknown folk rhymes, all with human subjects. After Gregory Griggs, posing stoutly in his 27 different wigs (Lobel's 28th square shows him embarrassed by baldness), come a Miss Mackay whose "knives and forks have run away," a little boy who "whistled up a tune,/And all the little sausages/ Danced around the room," a furtive "Hannah Bantry/in the pantry,/gnawing at a mutton bone. ." and the perfect "Jerry Hall/he is so small/a rat could eat him,/hat and all." There are some fresh, first-rate limericks, a twist on Miss Moffat, and a brisk ten lines on a "mad" family that could be ancestral Stupids. And all their foibles, talents, and comical conditions are keynoted with style and assurance in Lobel's solid little figures—as splendid in pastel rags (or, in one case, sprouting grass) as in 18th-century finery.

Pub Date: April 3, 1978

ISBN: 0688070426

Page Count: 48

Publisher: Greenwillow Books

Review Posted Online: May 1, 2012

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 1978

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THIS LITTLE TURKEY

A bit of a turkey itself.

A board-book twist on “This Little Piggy” has turkeys making the preparations for the family feast.

The text echoes the familiar rhyme, even beginning with “This little turkey went to market.” Readers already introduced to standard animal-sounds books will wonder what happened when they get to the end and the turkeys sound a lot like the final piggy, singing, “We…we …we... / …wish you a Happy Thanksgiving!” What happened to “gobble-gobble-gobble”? Furthermore, the in-between activities feel selected to suit the rhyme scheme rather than logic: why would a turkey knit a sweater, and what does that have to do with Thanksgiving? Blanco distinguishes the turkeys from one another with clothing and comb style, but they all have the same wattle and chubby wings/arms. Gender stereotyping is incompletely avoided. A turkey in a fedora goes to market, while a turkey wearing a baseball cap and trousers with suspenders “swept the floor.” Both male and female birds help set the table, but turkeys in dresses and pompadoured combs mind the little turkeys until supper is served, knit that sweater, and eventually call everyone in to eat.

A bit of a turkey itself. (Board book. 2-4)

Pub Date: Sept. 6, 2016

ISBN: 978-1-4998-0302-0

Page Count: 16

Publisher: Little Bee Books

Review Posted Online: Oct. 18, 2016

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WORDS WITH WINGS AND MAGIC THINGS

Broad and subtle in turn—verse to stay with readers for years to come.

A tasty mix of visionary and nonsense verses, lavishly illustrated by a recent Caldecott Medalist.

Systematically gathered into seven loosely thematic groups, the poems, likewise tidy of rhyme and scansion, range from meditations on “Zero” and the many colors of the sky to silly wordplay (“What kind of pizza / do you like to eatsa?”) and a droll paean to pasta that rhymes spaghetti with yeti. The notion of flying away almost serves as a running theme; in various entries, a piñata, a child on “Jetpack Sneakers,” a breaching whale, and, for a moment, a boy waking to a sparrow’s song take off into the sky. Salati depicts a menagerie of creatures both real and imaginary that share space with a rich and racially diverse assortment of small figures who often resemble Maurice Sendak’s Nutshell Library outtakes for their large-headed, stubby-limbed looks and balletic poses. The entries are lighthearted overall; several read like nursery rhymes. Burgess displays a keen intuition for what will get kids laughing—and what will make them think. One poem, perhaps a reference to current politics, invites them to “leave the shouters with their schemes / while we continue with our dreams,” while another urges them to “live your dream / Reign supreme / King or queen / or something / delightfully / in between.”

Broad and subtle in turn—verse to stay with readers for years to come. (index) (Poetry. 7-11)

Pub Date: March 18, 2025

ISBN: 9781774880289

Page Count: 128

Publisher: Tundra Books

Review Posted Online: Dec. 14, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2025

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