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FROGGY GOES TO THE DOCTOR

A lightweight addition to the often charming Froggy canon. Froggy has to go for his annual check-up at the doctor’s office. At first he’s happy about this, for it means a day off from school. Then he remembers that it might also mean a shot and his enthusiasm quickly dampens. It’s not long, however, before the rambunctious frog is giving the doctor the Froggy business: making the doctor’s hair curl with his dead-fly breath (“I guess I forgot to brush,” he admits), yelling into the stethoscope, accidentally delivering a blow to the doctor’s chops when his reflexes are tested. The doctor does turn the tables when she brandishes the hypodermic, but she’s only kidding and Froggy escapes without puncture. It is all very airy—though energized by Remkiewicz’s bustling watercolors—and fairly aimless as well. There is very little meat for kids to chew on in this story, little even by way of entertainment. Froggy is typically good at offering a little direction to young readers—about sportsmanship, for instance, or how not to eat in restaurants—but no such is tendered here, be it positive or negative example, except for a slight introduction to the event. (Picture book. 2-5)

Pub Date: Sept. 1, 2002

ISBN: 0-670-03578-5

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Viking

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2002

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NELLIE'S BIG SPLASH

In this sweet story, scary things may remain scary, but pushing past them yields enormous rewards.

Doerrfeld expands her repertoire of stories featuring social and emotional learning with a tale of baby turtles and enormous waves.

After Nellie hatches alongside her many siblings, she’s overwhelmed to see how far they’ll have to travel to reach the ocean. Once they make it, the others dive happily into the surf, but Nellie takes one look at the pounding, terrifying waves and heads in the other direction. Each time Nellie thinks she has the situation under control (she tries to hide, run away, and rely on someone bigger and stronger), something comes along to change her mind. Scaling the nearby cliffs, she finds herself alone and lonely, but from her high vantage point, she realizes that the waves may be daunting, but there’s more to the ocean than she initially thought; in fact, it’s beautiful. Few young readers will blame Nellie for wanting to escape, and whether or not they pick up on the obvious messaging is less important than Nellie’s own personal journey. Her attempts to avoid her troubles carry hints of beloved titles such as Ashley Spires’ The Most Magnificent Thing (2014). The adorable, thick-lined digital art featuring a beguilingly expressive, large-headed, big-eyed, tiny turtle makes adept use of perspective, driving home the lesson.

In this sweet story, scary things may remain scary, but pushing past them yields enormous rewards. (Picture book. 3-5)

Pub Date: March 25, 2025

ISBN: 9780593856291

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Dial Books

Review Posted Online: Dec. 14, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2025

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THERE'S A BEAR IN YOUR BOOK

From the Who's in Your Book? series

“Beary” cute and endearing; a bedtime charmer.

Can you bear a cute bedtime story?

A night-capped brown bear stars in this adorable interactive story intended to help parents lull their little ones to sleep. Turns out those little ones are supposed to get Bear ready for a peaceful night’s slumber. The diminutive ursine is first introduced as having had a “big picnic.” Now a “very full and very tired” Bear needs a bath. This requires youngsters to shake the book vigorously to ensure Bear gets his tub “super-duper-bubbly.” Readers are invited to pop the bubbles, then to “FLAP the book like a fan” to towel Bear off. Just as Bear drifts off, youngsters having aided this effort by rocking the book, a blue monster wakes Bear up—and kids are urged to manipulate the book and perform other activities—e.g., wagging a finger, yawning, imagining five sheep, then singing them a lullaby—before Bear and a now-well-behaved Monster (and most of the sheep) finally settle down for the night. Children will be thoroughly entertained by these humorous shenanigans and, parents can only hope, feel pooped enough to easily drop off to sleep themselves, having dispatched Bear and company snugly off to dreamland. The sweet, colorful, lively illustrations incorporate large, capitalized onomatopoeic words and “instructions” for maneuvering the book; set in various fonts, these heighten visual interest and the fun. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

“Beary” cute and endearing; a bedtime charmer. (Picture book. 2-5)

Pub Date: Oct. 31, 2023

ISBN: 9780593703991

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Random House

Review Posted Online: July 26, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2023

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