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ITTY BITTY KITTY AND THE RAINY PLAY DAY

A good addition to stuck-inside storytimes.

Ava and Itty Bitty Kitty (who is anything but itty-bitty) have a day of indoor play.

What is there to do on a “drippy-droppy, plippy-ploppy, rainy, gray, can’t-play-outside-day”? Well…drawing on a foggy window is fun, but that gets old. Dad doesn’t know when the rain will stop, but Mom has an idea for a fun “game.” “Pick up your room” is tiring, but it doesn’t take long. Ava and Itty Bitty have a snack (complete with slurping and burping). They play Go Fish in Dad’s study, but Itty Bitty eats a fish-emblazoned card or two. They jump on the furniture in the living room until Itty Bitty spies a fish statue on a high shelf. After the inevitable catastrophe, the sun comes out—but Itty Bitty doesn’t like the puddles. Thankfully, Ava comes up with an imaginative use for the shower caps her father (an adman) has been working with, and play can resume (with some splashing and plenty of smiles). Prolific author Holub’s second Itty Bitty Kitty title is energetic, rainy-day goofiness. Burks’ digital, brightly colored, full-bleed illustrations are just as much fun as Ava’s day; the figures’ deliberately blurred edges lend fizz to the tale. Itty Bitty is bright purple; Ava and her family are white.

A good addition to stuck-inside storytimes. (Picture book. 3-7)

Pub Date: March 29, 2016

ISBN: 978-0-06-232220-3

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Harper/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Nov. 24, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2015

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WE'RE GOING ON AN EGG HUNT

From the We’re Going on a…Hunt series

The familiar singsong repetitiveness is catchy in all settings, holiday or otherwise.

A hoppy, snappy Easter version of We’re Going on a Bear Hunt.

Three young tots, with varied skin tones and baskets ready in their hands, eagerly scamper on a spring day to find some eggs. But of course, they meet hindrances along the way. “Ooh, look … // Chickens! / Flapping, pecking chickens.” Thus starts the rolling refrain: “Can’t go over them. / Can’t go under them. / Can’t go around them. // Got to go through them!” The waddling chickens don’t pose much of an obstacle, but they do “Cluck-cluck!” loudly as they scatter in the sun. The three youngsters then must face “fluffy, hungry bunnies” (adorable long-eared puffballs with carrot fronds in their mouths) and “happy, hopping frogs” as they balance on stones to cross a pond. All of this leads to a garden bursting with colorful flowers (“Rustle-swish! / Rustle-swish!”) and finally…10 eggs in pastel patterns. Each egg has a number on it to encourage readers to count along and strengthen their numeracy skills. Rozelaar’s plump and rounded world, with roly-poly trees, flowers, and hills, wraps the tale in coziness.

The familiar singsong repetitiveness is catchy in all settings, holiday or otherwise. (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: Jan. 7, 2025

ISBN: 9798887771304

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Nosy Crow

Review Posted Online: Oct. 25, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2024

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A LIBRARY BOOK FOR BEAR

From the Bear and Mouse Adventures series

Team Becker and Denton has again succeeded in creating a book that keeps the attention of young readers and makes them smile.

In a series of scenes both silly and gently humorous, the ever persistent Mouse works hard to persuade gruff-but-lovable bear to become a library user.

“One morning, Bear heard a tap-tap-tapping on his door.” Readers already familiar with the series will recognize this inviting opener, as well as the arrival of Mouse, always “small and gray and bright-eyed.” The use of this familiar introduction works well for beginning readers, who then learn that this time, Bear’s trademark conservatism makes him balk at the idea of visiting a library. After all, he is sure that “he had all the books he would ever need.” Children will love the arbitrary nature of his collection of seven titles: kings and queens, honeybees and “one about pickles.” When Bear has finally been persuaded to go to the library—holding Mouse in a basket as he races there strapped into red roller skates—he continues to be cantankerous in the stacks. The librarian—the solitary human among assorted critters—plays a part in Bear’s latest behavior modification. Although modern libraries are seldom anymore the silent sanctuaries seen within this stately edifice, excellent text and layout combine with friendly illustrations to set the newest generation of readers laughing at the well-worn joke of someone bellowing for quiet in the library.

Team Becker and Denton has again succeeded in creating a book that keeps the attention of young readers and makes them smile. (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: July 22, 2014

ISBN: 978-0-7636-4924-1

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Candlewick

Review Posted Online: May 18, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2014

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