by Jim Benton ; illustrated by Jim Benton ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 17, 2019
Probably not to everyone’s taste—but sure to be popular with the fart and barf set.
It’s take two for Catwad and Blurmp, along with more giggles, grossness, and exaggeration.
Blue-gray Catwad hates everything except torturing his painfully naïve and pathologically happy orange roommate, Blurmp. Across 25 named episodes ranging from three to seven pages of brightly colored comic panels, the two cats play pranks and toss out one-liners at each other’s expense. In “Gaming,” Blurmp is really enjoying his video game even after Catwad points out that the controller is not connected…and the game is actually a commercial for a diarrhea remedy. In “Salad,” Blurmp makes Catwad a salad that Catwad does not want to eat. Catwad points out that koalas, cows, manatees, and pandas all eat nothing but salad and are “slow and lazy.” Blurmp realizes that Catwad doesn’t want to eat the salad because (poking Catwad’s flab) Catwad must eat a lot of salads already. In “Dumb,” Blurmp is patient zero in a dumbness epidemic that destroys the world—thankfully it’s only Catwad’s nightmare, but it prompts Catwad to take Blurmp to “save the world.” Fans of Benton’s first collection will probably enjoy this one even more (and hope for a third). The target audience won’t know Ren and Stimpy, but they may see Squidward and SpongeBob in this feline friendship. A couple of puzzles round out the collection at the close.
Probably not to everyone’s taste—but sure to be popular with the fart and barf set. (Graphic short stories. 7-11)Pub Date: Sept. 17, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-338-32603-1
Page Count: 128
Publisher: Graphix/Scholastic
Review Posted Online: May 7, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2019
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written and illustrated by Jim Benton
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by Jim Benton ; illustrated by Jim Benton
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by Jim Benton ; illustrated by Jim Benton
by Nick Bruel ; illustrated by Nick Bruel ‧ RELEASE DATE: Dec. 29, 2020
This kid-friendly satire ably sets claws into a certain real-life franchise.
A trip to the Love Love Angel Kitty World theme park (“The Most Super Incredibly Happy Place on Earth!”) turns out to be an exercise in lowered expectations…to say the least.
When Uncle Murray wins a pair of free passes it seems at first like a dream come true—at least for Kitty, whose collection of Love Love Kitty merch ranges from branded underwear to a pink chainsaw. But the whole trip turns into a series of crises beginning with the (as it turns out) insuperable challenge of getting a cat onto an airplane, followed by the twin discoveries that the hotel room doesn’t come with a litter box and that the park doesn’t allow cats. Even kindhearted Uncle Murray finds his patience, not to say sanity, tested by extreme sticker shock in the park’s gift shop and repeated exposures to Kitty World’s literally nauseating theme song (notation included). He is not happy. Fortunately, the whole cloying enterprise being a fiendish plot to make people so sick of cats that they’ll pick poultry as favorite pets instead, the revelation of Kitty’s feline identity puts the all-chicken staff to flight and leaves the financial coffers plucked. Uncle Murray’s White, dumpy, middle-aged figure is virtually the only human one among an otherwise all-animal cast in Bruel’s big, rapidly sequenced, and properly comical cartoon panels.
This kid-friendly satire ably sets claws into a certain real-life franchise. (Graphic satire. 8-11)Pub Date: Dec. 29, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-250-20808-8
Page Count: 160
Publisher: Roaring Brook Press
Review Posted Online: Sept. 28, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2020
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by Nick Bruel ; illustrated by Nick Bruel
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by Nick Bruel ; illustrated by Nick Bruel
by Lorena Alvarez ; illustrated by Lorena Alvarez ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 14, 2017
A winner.
When a young girl’s imagination and creativity are co-opted by a mysterious new friend, she must find a way to regain what is rightfully hers.
Sandy is a brown-skinned, dark-haired girl with big black eyes and a vivid imagination. At night, as she goes to sleep, she catches the lights bobbing about in her room and turns them into anything she imagines. The next day is spent drawing the fantastical creatures from her dreams, much to the detriment of her schoolwork. When a tall, pale-skinned girl with purple hair befriends her, Sandy is excited, though there is something eerie and unsettling about her new companion. Her excitement soon turns to anger as Morfie enters her imaginative nighttime world and tries to take it over. Readers will cheer at the clever way in which Sandy regains control. Using a lovely palette that includes a liberal amount of rich, dark purple, Colombian-born Alvarez has drawn a world that harks back to her native Bogotá and days in Catholic school, evoking it in wonderful detail and atmosphere. Her pages are not crowded yet are filled with details that will engage readers. The beings that inhabit Sandy’s nighttime world are simply delightful. The album size, cloth spine binding, and spot gloss on the cover are the icing on the cake of this beautiful graphic novel.
A winner. (Graphic fantasy. 8-10)Pub Date: March 14, 2017
ISBN: 978-1-910620-13-7
Page Count: 56
Publisher: Nobrow Ltd.
Review Posted Online: Dec. 13, 2016
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2017
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by Shira Boss ; illustrated by Lorena Alvarez
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by Beth Ferry ; illustrated by Lorena Alvarez
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by Angela DiTerlizzi ; illustrated by Lorena Alvarez
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