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THE HIPPO AT THE END OF THE HALL

Unusual, fascinating, fast-paced.

A young boy tries to preserve a mysterious natural history museum.

Ben Makepeace has lived with his single mom in a basement apartment since his dad was lost at sea when Ben was 3. Receiving a cryptic invitation to “come now or come never” to the Gee Museum, Ben ignores his mother’s advice and bikes to the museum, which he finds closed. In a nearby cafe, Ben overhears Julian Pike, an unscrupulous real estate developer, and Tara Snow, a predatory museum director, plotting to ruin the Gee if its elderly owner refuses to sell to them. Returning to the Gee, Ben senses he’s been there before with his father and learns from exhibit animals—a shrew, a hippo, an owl, and a chameleon—how his future depends on preventing the Gee’s sale. When Pike and Snow take desperate measures, Ben unleashes dangerous “wild magic” within the museum and discovers his immutable connection to the Gee family. This supernatural tale of self-discovery in a setting of rare natural history specimens delivers a credible hero, folktale threads, memorable characters, and family bonds. Cooper’s worldbuilding seems endlessly inventive, the characters that inhabit the museum fully realized, up to and including the storytelling bees. Delicate, detailed pencil drawings track the drama and depict the principals as white.

Unusual, fascinating, fast-paced. (author’s note) (Fantasy. 8-10)

Pub Date: Oct. 8, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-5362-0448-3

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Candlewick

Review Posted Online: June 22, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2019

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ESCAPE FROM BAXTERS' BARN

Ironically, by choosing such a dramatic catalyst, the author weakens the adventure’s impact overall and leaves readers to...

A group of talking farm animals catches wind of the farm owner’s intention to burn the barn (with them in it) for insurance money and hatches a plan to flee.

Bond begins briskly—within the first 10 pages, barn cat Burdock has overheard Dewey Baxter’s nefarious plan, and by Page 17, all of the farm animals have been introduced and Burdock is sharing the terrifying news. Grady, Dewey’s (ever-so-slightly) more principled brother, refuses to go along, but instead of standing his ground, he simply disappears. This leaves the animals to fend for themselves. They do so by relying on their individual strengths and one another. Their talents and personalities match their species, bringing an element of realism to balance the fantasy elements. However, nothing can truly compensate for the bland horror of the premise. Not the growing sense of family among the animals, the serendipitous intervention of an unknown inhabitant of the barn, nor the convenient discovery of an alternate home. Meanwhile, Bond’s black-and-white drawings, justly compared to those of Garth Williams, amplify the sense of dissonance. Charming vignettes and single- and double-page illustrations create a pastoral world into which the threat of large-scale violence comes as a shock.

Ironically, by choosing such a dramatic catalyst, the author weakens the adventure’s impact overall and leaves readers to ponder the awkward coincidences that propel the plot. (Animal fantasy. 8-10)

Pub Date: July 7, 2015

ISBN: 978-0-544-33217-1

Page Count: 256

Publisher: HMH Books

Review Posted Online: March 31, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2015

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CAPTAIN UNDERPANTS AND THE SENSATIONAL SAGA OF SIR STINKS-A-LOT

From the Captain Underpants series , Vol. 12

Another epic outing in a graphic hybrid series that continues not just to push the envelope, but tear it to shreds.

Pranksters George and Harold face the deadliest challenge of their checkered careers: a supersmart, superstrong gym teacher.

With the avowed aim of enticing an audience of “grouchy old people” to the Waistband Warrior’s latest exploit, Pilkey promises “references to health care, gardening, Bob Evans restaurants, hard candies, FOX News, and gentle-yet-effective laxatives.” He delivers, too. But lest fans of the Hanes-clad hero fret, he also stirs in plenty of fart jokes, brain-melting puns, and Flip-O-Rama throwdowns. After a meteorite transforms Mr. Meaner into a mad genius (evil, of course, because “as everyone knows, most gym teachers are inherently evil”) and he concocts a brown gas that turns children into blindly obedient homework machines, George and Harold travel into the future to enlist aid from their presumably immune adult selves. Temporarily leaving mates and children (of diverse sexes, both) behind, Old George and Old Harold come to the rescue. But Meaner has a robot suit (of course he has a robot suit), and he not only beats down the oldsters, but is only fazed for a moment when Capt. Underpants himself comes to deliver a kick to the crotch. Fortunately, gym teachers, “like toddlers,” will put anything in their mouths—so an ingestion of soda pop and Mentos at last spells doom, or more accurately: “CHeffGoal-D’BLOOOM!”

Another epic outing in a graphic hybrid series that continues not just to push the envelope, but tear it to shreds. (Graphic/fiction hybrid. 8-10)

Pub Date: Aug. 25, 2015

ISBN: 978-0-545-50492-8

Page Count: 208

Publisher: Scholastic

Review Posted Online: May 17, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2015

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