This graphic novel might qualify as a Rube Goldberg device.
Barry has a simple plan for retrieving his friend Blue’s beach ball. He’s even written it in his notebook. Step No. 1: “Find whale.” Step No. 2: “Tickle fin” and then “Enter mouth.” Later steps turn out to involve an enormous tuba, an upside-down airplane, and an active volcano. The plan gets funnier each time it goes awry, and every few pages, Barry and his friends get catapulted into the air. Near the climax, they drop out of a flying saucer and land in the middle of a duck’s birthday party. The party, of course, is inside the aforementioned volcano. It ends cheerfully for everyone, especially the duck, who was afraid no one would show up for the party. The artwork couldn’t be any more cheerful or appealing. Every character is made up of the simplest possible shapes and the brightest possible colors. Barry the frog is a green rectangle. A rabbit named Pancakes is, confusingly, shaped like a pear and is yellow except for her pink tail. Blue is, less confusingly, a blue worm. The details are so gloriously loopy that, if anything, the climax, featuring more than a dozen ETs with balloons, will seem a little sedate. But even the quietest scene, with hugs and morals, includes an orange sky and a purple bird.
Only Rube Goldberg would find the story realistic, but slapstick fans will rejoice.
(Graphic fantasy. 6-10)