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HANGRY

Playful monster nosh.

This little guy has a monstrous appetite.

A little green monster riding the subway emerges at a stop holding a book entitled City Food Guide. Alas, Hot Diggity Dog, the restaurant the guide had highlighted as “BE$T HOTDOG EVER!!” is “Closed for Vacation.” This makes the little kaiju angry, a feeling that’s compounded by seeing others around him enjoying tasty foods. Comic book–style illustrations with panels and speech balloons show the monster repeating the phrases “I’m hungry! I’m angry!” as he balloons in size to visually represent his growing rage. Then, a page turn shows people fleeing as he stomps, Godzilla-like, through the city yelling, “I AM HANGRY.” First responders in the persons of a black-appearing policeman and a woman firefighter with light brown skin offer cabbages and broccoli, but after downing the vegetables by the truckload, the monster declares, “I WANT MORE.” When an olive-skinned street vendor offers up a hot dog with all the fixings, the monster is delighted—until a pigeon swoops in and snatches it, setting off another hangry fit and a chase. Resolution arrives when the vendor announces there’s still “plenty of hot dogs…probably enough for everyone.” It’s happily-ever-after for all (except vegetarians), and the satiated monster shrinks back to his original size, hangry no more. While the joke is extended perhaps a few pages longer than necessary, both caregivers and small children will find much to chuckle at.

Playful monster nosh. (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: June 4, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-316-55932-4

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: March 16, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2019

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WILFRED

Other, stronger picture books about friendship abound.

Wilfred is big. Wilfred is hairy. Wilfred is lonesome.

In this odd little story, Wilfred takes his big, hairy, lonely self to a nearby town where he hopes to make a friend. It turns out that the townspeople he encounters just happen to be bald: “They didn’t have a single hair on their heads. Not even the ladies.” Unfazed, Wilfred longs to join the bald children in their play, but all except one boy run away from him, and they end up having a great time together. Meanwhile, instead of maintaining fear of the giant, the other people take an interest in him since winter is coming and they want to take his hair to make wigs for themselves. They convince Wilfred he must shave himself in order to maintain his friendship—but now he is too cold to leave his cave. As the story twists and turns through its forced plotline, a now-hairless Wilfred ends up emerging as a hero when he rescues the little boy who initially befriended him. In gratitude, the townspeople remove their wigs and sew them into a large, hairy suit for Wilfred to wear, accepting him into their community. The pen-and-ink illustrations with digital colorization have an appealing cartoonish quality to them, but they can’t make up for the lackluster story.

Other, stronger picture books about friendship abound. (Picture book. 3-5)

Pub Date: March 21, 2013

ISBN: 978-0-8037-3732-7

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Dial Books

Review Posted Online: Jan. 15, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2013

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THIS MONSTER CANNOT WAIT!

For youngsters working on self-control (a school-readiness skill), Stewart does…eventually…learn that good things come to...

Stewart, from This Monster Needs a Haircut (2012), is going camping for the first time, and he (literally) cannot wait.

The camping trip is five whole days away. That is agony for such an impulsive and excitable monster. (Even on the title page, he’s already urging readers to “Just read the book already!”) In the hopes of speeding things up, Stewart paints the clocks, changes the calendar and even builds a time machine—but nothing works. Then Stewart realizes that if he could just make the end of the story come faster, camping would come faster too! Crumbling the fourth wall for readers, he reaches down to tug at the corners of the pages, while eagerly ripping another completely in half. Fortunately, Stewart’s parents are not amused and make him tape the book back together. Toothy and unkempt, with wild eyes and a temper tantrum of a roar—“I wanna go camping NOW!”—Stewart fully embodies a preschooler who has not yet mastered the art of waiting. Barton’s sprawling, hand-lettered text and its buoyant placement match the urgency of Stewart’s desperation. Patience is certainly a virtue, and one that is difficult to learn.

For youngsters working on self-control (a school-readiness skill), Stewart does…eventually…learn that good things come to those who wait. (Picture book. 3-5)

Pub Date: April 18, 2013

ISBN: 978-0-8037-3779-2

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Dial Books

Review Posted Online: Feb. 26, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2013

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