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LOUIE AND BEAR IN THE LAND OF ANYTHING GOES by Brady Smith

LOUIE AND BEAR IN THE LAND OF ANYTHING GOES

by Brady Smith ; illustrated by Brady Smith

Pub Date: Oct. 19th, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-593-22415-1
Publisher: Penguin Workshop

It’s hard to say which is the most appealing creation in this graphic novel.

The flying heli-phants have propellers on their backs. The high-four trees slap creatures’ palms. The main characters are nearly as interesting. Louie, the new kid in his town, was transformed into a skilled wrestler after he traveled through a magic portal. His hamster, Scooty, who came with him, has grown so large that he asks people to call him Bear. That’s one of the main rules of the Land of Anything Goes: You’re transformed into whatever you were thinking about when you arrived, which means one character has the head of a chicken. (Many characters are animals, but Louie and chicken-headed Cluck appear White; their friend Tooty has light-brown skin and turquoise hair.) Large sections of the story are so wonderfully strange that they’re nearly impossible to describe, but this being a fantasy, there’s a prophecy: Louie will save everyone from the villain. Unfortunately, the book is almost too imaginative. There are too many brawls, too many new creatures, and way too many poop jokes. Déjà vu sets in. But the toilet humor leads to a note of great wisdom. About the cacacapoop (which looks like a hilarious parody of the Jabberwock), Cluck says: “If you name something that’s really scary a funny name, it makes that thing less scary.”

This adventure story may be as exhausting for the readers as for the adventurers.

(Graphic adventure. 8-12)