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LITTLE AGAIN

A reassuring, beautifully illustrated book with empathy for adopted kids.

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Corey’s picture book offers a fable about growing up as an adopted child.

A depressed girl believes that becoming little again will make her happy, so she climbs a magic tree that makes you younger on the way up. She meets tree dwellers and explains her mission to them, but each finely illustrated animal tells her about all the things they’re looking forward to doing when they get older. At the very top, the now-little girl meets her birth mother, who appears to be Asian like her. The woman explains she’ll always be watching over her and that it’s time to grow up. Falling from the tree, the girl returns to size and is caught by her adoptive parents. She feels safe and loved and is finally “ready to be bigger.” In his debut book, Corey acknowledges adoptive children’s feelings of loss and disconnection from their origins without any scolding about, for example, counting their blessings. Instead, readers get gentle reminders of love and security plus encouragement to see the future as holding more fun and freedom. Corey’s lovely, soft-textured, artistic illustrations complement the poignant text perfectly.

A reassuring, beautifully illustrated book with empathy for adopted kids.

Pub Date: Dec. 22, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-64990-229-0

Page Count: 20

Publisher: Palmetto Publishing

Review Posted Online: Feb. 20, 2021

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THE BOOK HOG

There’s nothing especially new here, but the good-natured celebration of books, reading, and libraries will charm fellow...

A porcine hoarder of books learns to read—and to share.

The Book Hog’s obsession is clear from the start. Short declarative sentences describe his enthusiasm (“The Book Hog loved books”), catalog the things he likes about the printed page, and eventually reveal his embarrassing secret (“He didn’t know how to read”). While the text is straightforward, plenty of amusing visual details will entertain young listeners. A picture of the Book Hog thumbing through a book while seated on the toilet should induce some giggles. The allusive name of a local bookshop (“Wilbur’s”) as well as the covers of a variety of familiar and much-loved books (including some of the author’s own) offer plenty to pore over. And the fact that the titles become legible only after our hero learns to read is a particularly nice touch. A combination of vignettes, single-page illustrations and double-page spreads that feature Pizzoli’s characteristic style—heavy black outlines, a limited palette of mostly salmon and mint green, and simple shapes—move the plot along briskly. Librarians will appreciate the positive portrayal of Miss Olive, an elephant who welcomes the Book Hog warmly to storytime, though it’s unlikely most will be able to match her superlative level of service.

There’s nothing especially new here, but the good-natured celebration of books, reading, and libraries will charm fellow bibliophiles, and the author’s fans will enjoy making another anthropomorphic animal friend. (Picture book. 4-7)

Pub Date: March 26, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-368-03689-4

Page Count: 48

Publisher: Disney-Hyperion

Review Posted Online: Nov. 11, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2018

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I'M ON IT!

From the Elephant & Piggie Like Reading! series

Whether in hand or on shelf, this one’s sure to make a splash anywhere and everywhere.

A frog tries to do everything a goat does, too.

Goat asks Frog to look at them before declaring “I’m ON it!” while balancing atop a tree stump near a pond. After an “Oooh!” and a “You know what?” Frog leaps off their lily pad to balance on a rock: “I’m on it, too!” Goat grabs a prop so that they can be both “on it AND beside it.” (It may take young readers a little bit to realize there are two its.) So does Frog. The competition continues as Frog struggles to mimic overconfident Goat’s antics. In addition to on and beside, the pair adds inside, between, under, and more. Eventually, it all gets to be too much for Frog to handle, so Frog falls into the water, resumes position on the lily pad, and declares “I am OVER it” while eating a fly. In an act of solidarity, Goat jumps in, too. In Tsurumi’s first foray into early readers she pares down her energetic, colorful cartoon style to the bare essentials without losing any of the madcap fun. Using fewer than 80 repeated words (over 12 of which are prepositions), the clever text instructs, delights, and revels in its own playfulness. Color-coded speech bubbles (orange for Goat, green for Frog) help match the dialogue with each speaker. Like others in the Elephant & Piggie Like Reading series, Elephant and Piggie metafictively bookend the main narrative with hilariously on-the-nose commentary.

Whether in hand or on shelf, this one’s sure to make a splash anywhere and everywhere. (Early reader. 4-8)

Pub Date: May 11, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-368-06696-9

Page Count: 64

Publisher: Hyperion

Review Posted Online: March 30, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2021

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