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BUDDY'S BEDTIME BATTERY

Searchers of progressive muscle-relaxation books for children will find this choice interesting, but readers after robot...

Imagination and progressive relaxation are the key to powering down little Buddy, the boy “robot.”

With spiky blond hair and chubby pink cheeks, Buddy looks in the mirror at his new robot pajamas and proclaims, “BEEP! My battery is on! I can walk and talk!” As bedtime approaches, Robo-Mom turns on her techno-voice and orders Ro-Buddy to turn on his “jumping button” until his “turbo charger” is worn out. The science-fiction dialogue continues through a trip to the family bathroom for a visit to the “space station potty.” When Robo-Dad commands, “Time to activate your cuddle pod,” the toddler climbs into bed while his parents start to “power down” each part of Buddy’s very active body. “Ro-Buddy, please turn off your legs. BEEP! BEEP! Be still, legs. Be still.” The techno-themed scenery and language are kept to a minimum, offering just enough to give it an imaginative flavor; the center of the book focuses on relaxation. With gentle and methodical repetition, each wiggly part is powered down and ordered to be still: legs, bottom, belly, arms, and face. Bowers’ illustrations have a laser focus on Buddy, capturing the active hands and feet of a toddler playing make-believe. Overall, the storyline and pictures are a typical parenting go-to-bed book rather than one for true robot fans.

Searchers of progressive muscle-relaxation books for children will find this choice interesting, but readers after robot fare should look elsewhere. (Picture book. 2-4)

Pub Date: Sept. 27, 2016

ISBN: 978-0-553-51339-4

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Random House

Review Posted Online: May 17, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2016

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BIRDIE PLAYS DRESS-UP

From the Birdie series

Without a consistent child's voice, this runway romp fizzles.

A young fashionista's play proves less inspired than her posh designs.

Imitation is indeed the sincerest form of flattery for this daughter, as Birdie plays dress-up in her mother's stylish attire. She twirls in princess dresses, adopts a movie-star identity in sunglasses and teeters in stilettos. Her little white pooch, Monster, serves as a stylish sidekick, even posing as a hat-stand for one of her mama's beautiful, two-toned accessories. Birdie's fashion-conscious mother, never viewed face-on, showcases her sense of daring design with mile-high shoes and slim, crossed legs. Though the book seems initially to be a light trip into dressing-up, Birdie's childlike exuberance veers abruptly into contrived self-awareness. “But there's nothing better than just being me!” The stylish design features splashes of paint and tissue-paper ribbons; a cutout Birdie pops in her exaggerated high heels on the fashion-forward cover. Textured accents and varied patterns highlight the finest form of fashion.

Without a consistent child's voice, this runway romp fizzles. (Board book. 2-3)

Pub Date: April 3, 2012

ISBN: 978-0-316-20111-7

Page Count: 14

Publisher: LB Kids/Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: May 29, 2012

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2012

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THE BIG BOOK OF WORDS AND PICTURES

There are not enough words available to save this jampacked selection from bursting-at-the-seams busyness.

A picture dictionary without much rhyme or reason.

This oversized German import covers a vast range of concepts and topics, both familiar and foreign to young children. Tiny, clean illustrations of objects array themselves on a white background, sometimes including winsome animal characters. From ordinary household items to things seen in the out-of-doors to common foods to modes of transportation to musical instruments to sports to amusements to emotional concepts, this book tries to cover everything. Some items may be recognizable but are unlikely to come up in casual conversation (runner beans), while others (beret, lawn bowling) seem hardly necessary as toddler vocabulary. Slight variations in terminology make for unwarranted repetition; instead of just one bed on display, toddler, single and double beds all make an appearance. Vocabulary provides highly specific terms (“push bike”). Concepts covered include numbers, shapes and emotions, while an alphabet review in an eye-pleasing but developmentally baffling sophisticated design rounds out the comprehensive selection. With some 20 items to the page, spreads overwhelm rather than illuminate.

There are not enough words available to save this jampacked selection from bursting-at-the-seams busyness. (Board book. 2-4)

Pub Date: March 1, 2012

ISBN: 978-1-8775-7905-9

Page Count: 22

Publisher: Gecko Press

Review Posted Online: May 29, 2012

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2012

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