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CHOCOLATE'S DREAM

Readers who prefer their sentimentality raw and still on the bone may go for this, but Marc Simont’s Stray Dog (2001) is...

An abandoned dog yearns for a new home with a young “sort-of” friend.

Each morning Chocolate wakes up in an abandoned windmill and spends the day lurking behind a fence, watching a child named Sarah. At last a bird asks him why he’s so dirty, and hearing his sad tale of abandonment (apparently because he was too big—“My bottom was huge!” he laments) when his former family went on vacation, the bird sings loudly until Sarah runs outside. It’s love at first sight or, as Blasco puts it, “they both felt a shiver run through their bodies. It was the beating of their hearts, which had become joined forever and ever.” Coco illustrates the syrupfest with watery painted images of doll-like human figures sporting painted red cheeks and a dog with a nose that varies in size in different views from merely humongous to face-swallowing. The array of dog collars on the endpapers has more visual appeal.

Readers who prefer their sentimentality raw and still on the bone may go for this, but Marc Simont’s Stray Dog (2001) is just one of many like episodes with the artistic and emotional depth this book lacks. (Picture book. 6-8)

Pub Date: Oct. 13, 2015

ISBN: 978-84-16147-50-2

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Cuento de Luz

Review Posted Online: July 21, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2015

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DEAR BEAST

An effective early chapter book conveyed in a slightly overdone gag.

Epistolary dispatches from the eternal canine/feline feud.

Simon the cat is angry. He had done a good job taking care of his boy, Andy, but now that Andy’s parents are divorced, a dog named Baxter has moved into Andy’s dad’s house. Simon believes that there isn’t enough room in Andy’s life for two furry friends, so he uses the power of the pen to get Baxter to move out. Inventively for the early-chapter-book format, the story is told in letters written back and forth; Simon’s are impeccably spelled on personalized stationery while Baxter’s spelling slowly improves through the letters he scrawls on scraps of paper. A few other animals make appearances—a puffy-lipped goldfish who for some reason punctuates her letter with “Blub…blub…” seems to be the only female character (cued through stereotypical use of eyelashes and red lipstick), and a mustachioed snail ferries the mail to and fro. White-appearing Andy is seen playing with both animals as a visual background to the text, as is his friend Noah (a dark-skinned child who perhaps should not be nicknamed “N Man”). Cat lovers will appreciate Simon’s prickliness while dog aficionados will likely enjoy Baxter’s obtuse enthusiasm, and all readers will learn about the time and patience it takes to overcome conflict and jealousy with someone you dislike.

An effective early chapter book conveyed in a slightly overdone gag. (Fiction. 6-8)

Pub Date: May 12, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-8234-4492-2

Page Count: 80

Publisher: Holiday House

Review Posted Online: Jan. 20, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2020

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THERE'S A PEST IN THE GARDEN!

From the Giggle Gang series

Silly reads for new readers to dig into.

A turnip-loving duck and its friends defend their garden.

Alas, the duck, sheep, dog, and donkey immediately discover the eponymous pest in the garden when it (a groundhog?) eats a row of beans. The duck is frantic that turnips are next, but instead the pest eats the sheep’s favorite crop: corn. Peas occupy the next row, and the pest gobbles them up, too. Instead of despairing, however, the donkey cries, “Yippee! He ate ALL THE PEAS!” and catching the others’ puzzled looks, continues, “I don’t like peas.” After this humorous twist, the only uneaten row is sown with turnips, and the duck leaps to devour them before the pest can do so. In a satisfying, funny conclusion, the duck beams when the dog, sheep, and donkey resolve to plant a new garden and protect it with a fence, only to find out that it will exclude not just the groundhog, but the duck, too. A companion release, What Is Chasing Duck?, has the same brand of humor and boldly outlined figures rendered in a bright palette, but its storyline doesn’t come together as well since it’s unclear why the duck is scared and why the squirrel that was chasing it doesn’t recognize the others when they turn and chase him at book’s end.

Silly reads for new readers to dig into. (Early reader. 6-8)

Pub Date: June 6, 2017

ISBN: 978-0-544-94165-6

Page Count: 48

Publisher: HMH Books

Review Posted Online: March 28, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2017

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