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YOU CAN’T LAY AN EGG IF YOU’RE AN ELEPHANT

A BOOK ABOUT HOW ANIMALS ARE BORN

This gentle introduction to animal birth compares the eggs and babies of small and large birds, small and large mammals, chimps and human beings. Following the same format as the author and illustrator’s You Can’t Take Your Body to a Repair Shop (2004), the informational text is interspersed with short, often silly poems that might help young listeners remember the facts. Cartoon-style illustrations, apparently pen and ink with watercolor, nicely complement the text. Unfortunately, the page showing egg sizes and colors includes a chicken egg that is far smaller than the eggs readers will have encountered in their kitchens. The others seem to be similarly reduced in size. In the section on penguins, there are contradictory statements about whether a chick is ever left alone. The chapter comparing human and chimp babies is nicely organized to demonstrate the chimp’s initial head start and the child’s later, different abilities, but the scientist whose observations led to this information is unnamed. Disappointing. (Picture book/nonfiction. 5-8)

Pub Date: June 1, 2007

ISBN: 978-1-59354-606-9

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Blue Apple

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2007

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JACK GETS ZAPPED!

From the Jack Book series , Vol. 8

Zip to get this Zapped Jack book.

A rad addition to Barnett and Pizzoli’s early readers about Jack the rabbit, the Lady, and Rex the dog.

One rainy day, the Lady (who presents White) and Rex settle in for a nice day of reading. Jack doesn’t join them in this cozy activity, as he’s too busy enjoying his video game, “Rad Kid.” Then in a fantastic twist, lightning strikes, and, as the title foreshadows, Jack gets zapped into the game. An unlikely hero emerges as the Lady picks up the game controls and plays the game to save Zapped Jack, who, after some in-game fun, is defeated by the Boss. Pizzoli cleverly alters his illustrations for the scenes of the game within the book to make them appear pixelated, and Barnett’s funny, controlled text makes the story accessible to emergent readers. The text describing the Lady’s acquisition of gaming skills is particularly chuckleworthy: “You got this! Now go! Hop over that pit! Press A and RIGHT! / Oh. You fell in. // That’s OK! You get three lives. So you have two lives left! Just stomp on this bad guy and— / You died again.” Gaming isn’t vilified in this story, nor is reading elevated as the better activity, which makes it all the more likely that readers who prefer gaming over reading will actually enjoy this title. The backmatter gives directions for drawing Zapped Jack, and readers may well wish there were an accompanying game, too. (This book was reviewed digitally with 9-by-13-inch double-page spreads viewed at 22.2% of actual size.)

Zip to get this Zapped Jack book. (Early reader. 5-8)

Pub Date: Feb. 2, 2021

ISBN: 978-0-593-11401-8

Page Count: 80

Publisher: Viking

Review Posted Online: Nov. 26, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2020

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YOU'RE A GOOD SWIMMER

Not exactly evenhanded in ascribing genetic agency but joyous, clever, and inclusive.

Actor and podcaster Rivas offers effervescent affirmation that when it comes to being alive, we are all huge winners.

It all begins with “the biggest race of your life,” depicted in Boroff’s animated, glowing illustrations as a cloud of sperm rendered as thumbprints or thumbprint-shaped blobs with long, wriggly tails zooming toward an egg cell. Being “crafty…quick…smart and a little wild,” one particular “you” got there first, and with a bit of placental protection, “all the forces of the universe cooperated so that you could be here.” Rivas covers the bases, evolution-wise, with separate, allusive references to a heritage measured in “billions of years” and to something “mysterious, immense, and profound” that “had already decided, since the beginning of time, that you would exist.” More importantly, you were wanted, the author affirms. And, being “a champion of champions. Genetically speaking,” you “WERE BORN A WINNER.” The egg’s role doesn’t get much explicit notice in the narrative, but it does in the artwork, which includes schematic but recognizable views of an ovum, a placenta, and several figures with bulging midriffs. Also, on another page, silhouetted couples, including one who uses a wheelchair, dance at a “starting line” (and “there are many starting lines,” Rivas writes).

Not exactly evenhanded in ascribing genetic agency but joyous, clever, and inclusive. (Picture book. 5-8)

Pub Date: July 16, 2024

ISBN: 9798986827346

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Wheat Penny Press

Review Posted Online: May 17, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2024

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