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FLIP-O-STORIC

Sturdy split pages allow readers to create their own inventive combinations from among a handful of prehistoric critters. Hard on the heels of Flip-O-Saurus (2010) drops this companion gallery, printed on durable boards and offering opportunities to mix and match body thirds of eight prehistoric mammals, plus a fish and a bird, to create such portmanteau creatures as a “Gas-Lo-Therium,” or a “Mega-Tor-Don.” The “Mam-Nyc-Nia” places the head of a mammoth next to the wings and torso of an Icaronycteris (prehistoric bat) and the hind legs of a Macrauchenia (a llamalike creature with a short trunk), to amusing effect. Drehsen adds first-person captions on the versos, which will also mix and match to produce chuckles: “Do you like my nose? It’s actually a short trunk…” “I may remind you of an ostrich, because my wings aren’t built for flying…” “My tail looks like a dolphin’s.” With but ten layers to flip, young paleontologists will run through most of the permutations in just a few minutes, but Ball’s precisely detailed ink-and-watercolor portraits of each animal formally posed against plain cream colored backdrops may provide a slightly more enduring draw. A silhouette key on the front pastedown includes a pronunciation guide and indicates scale. Overall, a pleasing complement to more substantive treatments. (Novelty nonfiction. 6-8)

Pub Date: May 1, 2011

ISBN: 978-0-7892-1099-9

Page Count: 22

Publisher: Abbeville Kids

Review Posted Online: April 4, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2011

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YOU ARE MY BEST FRIEND

From the Tyrannosaurus series , Vol. 2

Dinosaurs have feelings too.

Kind treatment reforms a prehistoric bully in this dino bromance from Japan.

Still looking a lot like a saw-backed Godzilla in Miyanishi’s high-contrast orange-and-blue illustrations, the T. Rex first met (on this side of the Pacific) in You Look Yummy! (2015) falls off a cliff into the ocean while meanly chasing a herd of little styracosauruses. Just as he’s about to drown, along comes flippered, long-necked Elasmosaurus to boost him out of the water and, like a nurturing mammal, tenderly lick his injuries clean. As the two become fast friends, not only does T. Rex guiltily deny to Elasmosaurus that he’s a bully, he actually changes his behavior toward former victims too. When Elasmosaurus is beaten up (a “nasty dinosaur in the ocean” bites him all over), Tyrannosaurus ultimately effects a rescue in return. Confessing his true nature, he then makes a promise: “I will take care of you and help you get better. And we will be together forever and ever.” “Forever and ever,” Elasmosaurus affirms, as the two embrace tightly in the closing scene. Such demonstrativeness in male-male friendships is decidedly uncommon in American literature; to see the sentiment in a book with such muscular illustrations (and protagonists) is something of a cognitive disconnect that may cause more than one reader to reconsider assumptions.

Dinosaurs have feelings too. (Picture book. 6-8)

Pub Date: June 1, 2016

ISBN: 978-1-940842-10-3

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Museyon

Review Posted Online: March 29, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2016

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PIRASAURS!

Prehistoric pirates are always worth a play, as is the peaceable theme, but such amateurish writing merits only the old...

A small dinosaur earns the respect of a scaly crew of dino-pirates with a clever bit of conflict resolution.

Slack’s pictures are busy with glowering, crocodile-toothed dinos of diverse hue in full piratical regalia, and it’s a good thing, as they add much-needed wind to the sails of Funk’s lubberly, exclamation-mark–laden verse: “With lots to learn, / I’ve got to earn / The crew’s respect and trust,” the would-be swabbie confides. “I’ll rise in rank or / Walk the plank… / I hope I can adjust!” Frantic efforts to do any shipboard task competently fail—sometimes in ways that serve meter and rhyme over actual sense: “I scrub and brush in such a rush / She throws me overboard!” Still, when half of a torn treasure map leads to an island dust-up with a rival crew of pirasaurs clutching the other half, a suggestion to share map and loot makes his “dream to join the team” come true at last: “This crew and I are linked. / With gems, doubloons, and silver spoons / We’ll never go extinct!”

Prehistoric pirates are always worth a play, as is the peaceable theme, but such amateurish writing merits only the old heave-ho. (Picture book. 6-8)

Pub Date: Aug. 30, 2016

ISBN: 978-0-545-75049-3

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Orchard/Scholastic

Review Posted Online: April 12, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2016

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