Awards & Accolades

Our Verdict

  • Our Verdict
  • GET IT

Next book

Max The Flying Sausage Dog

TAILS FROM THE POUND

From the Max The Flying Sausage Dog series , Vol. 2

A thoroughly enjoyable book for young readers featuring deft storytelling, humor, and heart.

Awards & Accolades

Our Verdict

  • Our Verdict
  • GET IT

Criminal activity at the local dog pound and a dream about the queen of England figure into this funny, charming tale about a 7-year-old boy and his flying dachshund.

Young Tom’s pet “sausage dog,” Max, a rescue from the local pound, has an unusual, secret gift. When he whirls his tail, he can fly, and whenever Tom arrives home from school, Max greets him by zooming like a helicopter into his arms. But in this follow-up to Max the Flying Sausage Dog: A Tail from London (2014), a dog-pound manager and an odd-looking policeman confiscate Max, claiming that his original owner has been found. That night, Tom dreams that he asks the queen of England—a fellow dog lover—for help, and she threatens to jail the pound manager in the Tower of London if he doesn’t release Max. The authors aim a sly bit of humor at adults when Tom tells the queen that his mum always says “patience is a virtue,” and the queen responds, “That’s what I’ve been telling my son, Charles, for years.” Indeed, a peppery wit informs this gentle story throughout. The strange policeman, for instance, is “tall and thin with an Adam’s apple that stood out like a pickled onion,” and Robins’ offbeat illustrations are a spot-on match to the descriptions, with comic details to engage the eye. Tom and his mother team up to rescue Max and confront the bad guys—“Mum can be pretty frightening when she gets a certain voice on,” Tom says—and chaos ensues as whirligig Max leads the chase to rescue other pooches, too. The book includes a helpful list of words and phrases used in the story that are common in England: dachshund is pronounced “dash-hound”; “Telly” is short for “television”; “Lovely jubbly” is “money”; and in cockney rhyming slang, “my boots,” becomes “Me daisy roots.” The book ends with an endearing coda: a photo of the real-life inspiration for the Max character (“Could he fly? / That will remain a secret forever”).

A thoroughly enjoyable book for young readers featuring deft storytelling, humor, and heart.

Pub Date: Sept. 24, 2015

ISBN: 978-0-9910364-8-6

Page Count: 50

Publisher: Words In The Works LLC

Review Posted Online: Jan. 4, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2016

Next book

DIM SUM FOR EVERYONE!

Dim sum is the perfect tea party for children because of the tasty, small dishes on teacarts from which to choose. Here, a little girl narrates a simple story of the delicious meal she shares with her family. Turnip cakes, fried shrimp, sweet pork buns, and sweet tofu are all chosen, and lastly, the narrator selects egg tarts. As each child selects from a cart, the perspective changes to focus on the chooser. The bright red restaurant rug is the background color for every page, setting off the silver carts with their goodies and the bright, patterned colors of the people’s clothes. The yellow letters of the text at times curve to match the tables in the picture or appear a little off to the side so as not to interfere with the visual image. One particularly effective spread steps back and shows a half-dozen tables all filled with little dishes and the silver carts wending their way through them; the pattern is delightful. A history of the origins of dim sum and its popularity today is described in an epilogue. The bright green endpapers are decorated at the front with food, condiments, and tableware while the back endpapers depict almost two dozen dim sum dishes. A delightful read-aloud, sure to please those children who have enjoyed dim sum and a fascinating adventure for those who have yet to experience it. (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: July 10, 2001

ISBN: 978-0-440-41770-5

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Knopf

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2001

Next book

WHAT IF...

This extraordinary book will make it hard for any child reader to settle for the mundaneness of reality.

A testament to the power of an imaginative mind.

A compulsively creative, unnamed, brown-skinned little girl with purple hair wonders what she would do if the pencil she uses “to create…stories that come from my heart” disappeared. Turns out, it wouldn’t matter. Art can take many forms. She can fold paper (origami), carve wood, tear wallpaper to create texture designs, and draw in the dirt. She can even craft art with light and darkness or singing and dancing. At the story’s climax, her unencumbered imagination explodes beyond the page into a foldout spread, enabling readers both literally and figuratively to see into her fantasy life. While readers will find much to love in the exuberant rhyming verse, attending closely to the illustrations brings its own rewards given the fascinating combinations of mixed media Curato employs. For instance, an impressively colorful dragon is made up of different leaves that have been photographed in every color phase from green to deep red, including the dragon’s breath (made from the brilliant orange leaves of a Japanese maple) and its nose and scales (created by the fan-shaped, butter-colored leaves of a gingko). Sugar cubes, flower petals, sand, paper bags, marbles, sequins, and lots more add to and compose these brilliant, fantasy-sparking illustrations.

This extraordinary book will make it hard for any child reader to settle for the mundaneness of reality. (Picture book. 3-7)

Pub Date: April 3, 2018

ISBN: 978-0-316-39096-5

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: Jan. 12, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2018

Close Quickview