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THE STORY BOOK KNIGHT

A sweet tale about the power of story, just right for nascent fans of Redwall.

In an homage to reading that also recalls The Story of Ferdinand, the power of words is extolled in rhyme.

“Leo was a gentle knight / in thought and word and deed. / While other knights liked fighting, / Leo liked to sit and read.” So when an ad for a dragon tamer appears in a magazine, the young mouse knight’s parents insist he take up the charge. Reluctantly, he sets off and encounters in succession a griffin, a troll, and a dragon. In each case, he saves his hide and avoids fighting by reading the creature a story featuring it. The coup de grâce? He lets each monster keep the book he reads to it. When he reaches home, his parents hug him and declare him a hero. Now Leo “doesn’t have to fight at all. / He’s left in peace—to read.” The sprightly, brightly colored illustrations fill the scenes with medieval details and exaggerate the action. In addition to the anthropomorphic mice, such common English woodland creatures as hedgehogs, badgers, and rabbits populate the quaint, half-timbered village and castle, and by the end of each encounter the not-very-scary monsters are all smiling genially. The rhymes easily move the story forward.

A sweet tale about the power of story, just right for nascent fans of Redwall. (Picture book. 4-8)

Pub Date: Sept. 6, 2016

ISBN: 978-1-4926-3814-8

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Sourcebooks Jabberwocky

Review Posted Online: May 31, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2016

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THE TRUTH ABOUT DRAGONS

A beautiful adventure about embracing both sides of one’s heritage.

A parent spins a bedtime story that takes a biracial child on a cross-cultural journey.

Donning a cloak and sturdy boots, the protagonist enters a lush autumn forest, venturing past “mischievous hobgoblins” and “glowing will-o’-the-wisps.” The pages are richly detailed, framed with decorative borders in a palette that is reminiscent of European fairy-tale illustrations with a touch of art nouveau. In a small thatched-roof cottage, the child encounters a White-presenting wise woman who describes dragons as “fearsome and fiery creatures” that hoard treasure and defeat knights. After learning this, the young adventurer slips into another forest, one with sumptuous, flowing ink illustrations in the style of traditional Chinese landscape paintings. Guided by the footprints of nine-tailed foxes and the advice of a white rabbit who lives on the moon, the child reaches the palace of a Chinese-presenting wise woman. In this realm, dragons are described as “majestic creatures of air and fire” who “rule in the skies and rivers” and control the rain. The Chinese-presenting parent ends the tale by noting that both worlds, though distinctly different, exist within the child and are open to be explored—and that “two wise grandmothers await / to share with you / their truth about dragons.” The book feels a little message-heavy, but it’s nevertheless a much-needed celebration of intergenerational storytelling and biracial identity. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A beautiful adventure about embracing both sides of one’s heritage. (Picture book. 5-8)

Pub Date: Aug. 15, 2023

ISBN: 9781250820587

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Henry Holt

Review Posted Online: May 9, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2023

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INVASION OF THE UNICORNS

Simply delightful (with a wry final twist).

When an alien unicorn descends to Earth, its mission morphs from embedded surveillance of an Earth family to just plain fun.

Bubble07’s log entries, addressed “Dear Fearless Leader,” comprise the narration. “You were right. We look exactly like the toy animals here.” Should the unicorn army invade Earth? To find out, Bubble07 wriggles into an arcade’s glass box full of plushy prizes and gets hooked by a dad for his daughter. (Dad and daughter present Black; mom, seen later, is a woman of color.) About Earthling Daughter, Bubble07 reports: “She loves her toys. She loves them to pieces! Some are missing their eyeballs. Is this going to happen to me?” Biedrzycki’s expert illustrations form a hilarious counterpoint to the alien’s clueless reportage. They begin in grayscale, accented by Bubble07’s otherworldly streams of neon-hued sparkles, as the spy experiences family camping and “show and share” at school. The jealous family sheepdog tries to bury Bubble07 in the backyard, but revenge is sweet: At night, discovering “amazing” peanut butter cookies, the spy leaves the empty bag next to the sleeping dog. “Fearless Leader…I must get this cookie recipe for our planet.” By Day 50, a snow day, full-color spreads depict the unicorn integrating into family life, experiencing Earthling Daughter’s birthday, cuddly bedtime stories, and a sick day as stand-in comfort animal. On the home planet, Bubble07’s final report recommends: “forget the invasion and send more of us to Earth for… / …a Unicorn Vacation!”

Simply delightful (with a wry final twist). (Picture book. 4-8)

Pub Date: Oct. 19, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-62354-272-6

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Charlesbridge

Review Posted Online: Aug. 17, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2021

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