Next book

A CARNIVAL OF CATS

No doubt preschoolers will enjoy learning about the various breeds of cat, but it’s the whimsical illustrations that really...

A carnival theme runs through the illustrations in this brief introduction to different breeds of cats.

Rhyming text and a window at the center of the right-hand pages suggest a certain type of cat. For example: the first window frames the paws and part of the face of an orange-and-black kitty cat, and the accompanying text reads: “Orange and black / from head to toe. / Could that be a….” Turn the page for the answer—“Calico!”—and an illustration of the calico cat grinning while swinging from a trapeze bar. The artwork, created with sepia ink, watercolor, and wax resist on paper, offers lovely, detailed pictures of all the felines frolicking about in carnival settings. In addition to the calico, the book features a tabby, Siamese, Persian, Maine coon, bobtail, Bombay, Russian blue, and a Scottish fold. The kitty riddles are framed with scenes of a little girl trying to identify a black-and-white cat, and the final heartwarming pages read: “Here comes that cat. / I know what kind. / He’s just a stray. / That cat is… // Mine!”

No doubt preschoolers will enjoy learning about the various breeds of cat, but it’s the whimsical illustrations that really make this one something to purr about. (Board book. 2-4)

Pub Date: Sept. 1, 2015

ISBN: 978-1-4598-0686-3

Page Count: 26

Publisher: Orca

Review Posted Online: Oct. 13, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2016

Next book

CHOMP GOES THE ALLIGATOR

A bang-up banquet certain to draw demands for repeat courses and sturdy enough to survive them.

A hungry alligator chows down on 10 sets of unwary swamp denizens—with, eventually, predictable results.

The heavy-duty pull-tab in the back cover is going to get a real workout here, as it makes the cheery gator’s jaw (visible above the top of each page) snap loudly shut to a chorus of “chomp, chomp, chomp!” on one “shiny, blue” fish, followed by two “furry, brown” otters, three “fluffy, white” cranes, and so on up to 10 “shimmering, purple” hummingbirds. As the adjectival insertions hint, each brightly smiling new quarry in the colorful cartoon illustrations comes with not only a number to count, but a textured tactile patch to touch (each scene also features a few artfully placed die-cut holes). Likely deflecting at least most parental frets about implicit or explicit violence in the rhymed and patterned scenario, Van Fleet arranges his figures so there’s no actual eating to be seen. As it eats, the increasingly rotund crocodile sprouts rainbow stripes so it looks rather like a striped pool toy—and when it at the end chomps on one tiny fish too many, it proceeds to belch out all the unharmed victims in a mighty foldout explosion. “Excuse me!” Inconspicuous labels on most of the flora and fauna dish up further nibbles of natural history.

A bang-up banquet certain to draw demands for repeat courses and sturdy enough to survive them. (Pop-up board book. 2-4)

Pub Date: Sept. 4, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-5344-2677-1

Page Count: 26

Publisher: Paula Wiseman/Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: July 29, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2018

Next book

TEN LITTLE RABBITS

As a counting book, fun. As a new Sendak book, by its mere existence, notable.

A posthumously published tale of overly prolific bunnies from a master of the picture-book form.

A young magician bows before readers and releases a rabbit from his hat. More and more rabbits appear. As the book counts from one rabbit to 10, the boy becomes increasingly frustrated with the sheer number of bunnies appearing from his headwear. His irritation is alleviated only when the narrator declares, “So then—he made them vanish again!” Now the numbers count down, and with every rabbit gone the child grows distinctly happier and more lighthearted. Originally created in 1970 as a pamphlet for a fundraiser for Philadelphia’s Rosenbach Museum, this book is visually similar to such Sendak crowd-pleasers as the Nutshell Library titles, particularly One Was Johnny (1962). Adult fans seeking the darker and weightier subject matter associated with the author’s later works would do best to look elsewhere. Children, however, will be drawn to the escalating tide of fuzzy bunnies and will share the protagonist’s sense of satisfaction at watching them go. The artwork is filled with simple charm, and the counting element proves to be a nice plus as well. The protagonist has skin the white of the page.

As a counting book, fun. As a new Sendak book, by its mere existence, notable. (Picture book. 2-4)

Pub Date: Feb. 6, 2024

ISBN: 9780062644671

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Harper/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Nov. 18, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2023

Close Quickview