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A IS FOR BEE

AN ALPHABET BOOK IN TRANSLATION

Combining visual verve with a sense of our worldwide connectedness, this both teaches and entertains.

A playful subversion of animal abecedaries.

Heck plumbs 68 non-English languages for 26 animal names that begin with different letters or sounds than their English counterparts. Thus, “G is for Cat” for speakers of Spanish (gato), Ojibwe (gaazhagens), and Korean (goyangi). I is for fish, O for eagle, and S for Lion. Frequent last-place-holder zebra is under V here—“Varikkutirai,” in Tamil. Heck includes languages spanning the globe, including those of several Native American tribes. As she explains in her author’s note, some of the represented languages with non-Roman alphabets or alternate writing systems are transliterated to represent the sounds that speakers make when saying the animal name. Against richly colored backgrounds, the black-and-white scratchboard illustrations dramatically employ contrast and texture. Hand-lettered display type enhances the visual drama and zestfully celebrates the multiplicity of animal names. Cleverly, each letter is hidden somewhere in the composition of its illustrated page, adding an A-to-Z seek-and-find element for children. Readers are also invited to use publisher-supplied links to hear native or fluent speakers pronounce the animal names. An alphabetized index links the languages to their respective letter(s). Cultural or geographical addenda might have further enhanced children’s understanding of this package’s truly global nexus. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Combining visual verve with a sense of our worldwide connectedness, this both teaches and entertains. (Picture book. 4-8)

Pub Date: May 3, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-64614-127-2

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Levine Querido

Review Posted Online: March 23, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2022

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YOU ARE A HONEY BEE!

From the Meet Your World series

Well meaning but simplistic.

Young readers are encouraged to emulate a honey bee’s actions as they learn about its basic biology.

The smiling adult worker bee emerges with a “CHOMP, WIGGLE, [and] STRETCH” in the opening double-page spread; in a corner panel, three circles each highlight a different smiling human child (racially diverse) engaging in each action. This sets a pattern as the bee cycles through its various roles: nursing larvae, making honey, guarding, foraging. Setting key verbs in all-caps, the chirpy text uses the second person, further encouraging readers to relate to the insect protagonist: “You STOP on a flower. You unroll your long tongue and DRINK up the sweet nectar…SLURP!” Fleck’s flat, undistinguished illustrations present a stylized bee with an oversized yellow head and black-and-yellow body that tapers to a point. It’s all cute enough, but specific choices undermine the book’s educational mission. While some specialized vocabulary is presented (royal jelly, glands, antennae), Thompson elides metamorphosis, saying the adult bee “wake[s] up,” and incorrectly calls larvae “chubby white worms.” Worse, Fleck’s depiction of the honey bees’ nest finds it hanging impossibly from a single branch, exposed to the elements. This in no way replaces or even complements Candace Fleming and Eric Rohmann’s magisterial Honeybee (2020).

Well meaning but simplistic. (glossary, activities, facts) (Informational picture book. 4-7)

Pub Date: April 11, 2023

ISBN: 978-0-593-52969-0

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Dial Books

Review Posted Online: Dec. 23, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2023

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YOU ARE A RACCOON!

From the Meet Your World series

Naturalistic and charming.

A raccoon grows from baby to adult.

The second-person narration puts young readers in the position of the raccoon, born blind and deaf and only able to “sniff! Wiggle! Whine!” Further helping little ones to envision themselves as the raccoon, spotlight illustrations on the recto of each double-page spread show diverse children naturally engaging in the same activities as the animal. The spare text on each page is accessible for emerging readers, and the full-color art’s soothing palette makes this ideal for a bedtime story. From initially just snuggling and sleeping, the raccoon grows and begins to chatter, crawl, climb, and feast on berries and acorns as well as earthworms, beetles, and snails (while the illustrated children eat things like carrots, bananas, and pasta). Once winter comes, the plump raccoon family slumbers away, waking “every few weeks to look for food.” When spring arrives, the baby raccoon is now an adult ready to move out into a den of their own. The narrative is followed by lovingly written raccoon facts and activities for kids who want to pretend to be raccoons. The author warns that though they’re cute (and the rounded, charming creatures depicted in the illustrations are exceptionally adorable), raccoons are wild animals and need to be left alone by people and pets. Part of a series that spotlights familiar North American animals, the book deftly connects natural human children’s activities to raccoon behaviors without engaging in anthropomorphism. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Naturalistic and charming. (Informational picture book. 4-7)

Pub Date: April 11, 2023

ISBN: 978-0-593-52972-0

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Dial Books

Review Posted Online: Jan. 24, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2023

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