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THE GREAT AAA-OOO!

Shout along with the animals in the forest in an entertaining who-said-it tale.

Who or what is making that frightful noise in the night and keeping the animals awake?

Mouse hears the “AAA-OOO!” first, followed by Owl, Bear, Moose, Duck, Goose, and Dove. Each embellishes the description of the monster and what will befall them. “We’ll be plucked, stuffed, and roasted, and put in a pie!” Desperate, they climb higher and higher into the tree where they have sought refuge until a loud, resounding “crack!” sends them all tumbling to the ground. It is at this point that the source of the awful sound is uncovered; Wolf Cub, who does not like to be alone in the “dark, lonely woods.” Bear comforts him and the animals can go back to sleep until that famous morning alarm clock, the rooster, rouses them on the endpapers. Lambert peppers his familiar-feeling cumulative tale with many sounds from the animals and the tree when it’s under stress. Young listeners will certainly enjoy joining an increasingly loud chorus. The digital illustrations depict glossy, colorful animals against a solid black background. Their faces are expressive, and their movements are energetic. Adults sharing this title with children may find it more suitable as a read-aloud during daytime than as a bedtime story.

Shout along with the animals in the forest in an entertaining who-said-it tale. (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: Sept. 1, 2016

ISBN: 978-1-68010-032-7

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Tiger Tales

Review Posted Online: July 19, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2016

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THE SHIP IN THE WINDOW

Arrr, ’tis a seaworthy tale, so set your compass toward fulfilling your dreams, and she’ll not steer you wrong.

A simple ship yields a (relatively) big adventure in this classically told tale.

In a little cabin on a little lake, there lives a mouse named Mabel, a boy, and a man. The man constructs a very special model ship. “He wouldn’t even let the boy help.” Every night when she looks at it, Mabel wonders if the ship is seaworthy. She lets herself dream of piloting it through seas both rough and calm, “free and full of wonder.” When an opportunity presents itself, Mabel hesitates but reasons that the chance may never come again. Readers will be relieved to find that the ship does indeed float, but when the ship meets with tragedy, both Mabel and the man will need to find a solution. Jonker cleverly juxtaposes the mouse’s character arc alongside that of the grown man. Whereas Mabel must summon the courage to live her dreams, the man must overcome his fear of letting other people help him with his own. Cordell, meanwhile, outlines panels with rope, then fills his images to the brim with a busy cross-hatching technique that gives the book a timeless feel. Both boy and man in the book have light-brown skin.

Arrr, ’tis a seaworthy tale, so set your compass toward fulfilling your dreams, and she’ll not steer you wrong. (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: Aug. 20, 2024

ISBN: 9780593350577

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Viking

Review Posted Online: May 4, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2024

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A HOME FOR LEO

Far-fetched but satisfying.

This lighthearted tale of a child reared by sea lions is completely outlandish yet manages to capably address very real feelings about belonging and identity.

Leo, a young, white, blond boy, is pictured flying out of a boat during a storm even before the title page; he’s subsequently taken in by a family of sea lions. This looks like kid heaven—bodysurfing with sea lion pups, romping in a whale’s spout, and sleeping under the stars—but Leo feels and looks “different,” until he meets ”a creature who looked like him.” This creature, a young biracial, brown-skinned girl with hair in two ponytail puffs, really does look like him: They are both human. Once reunited with his human family, Leo is happy again, but as before, something is amiss. He still says “Ark! Ark!” and misses “his other family…and the sea.” Not explicitly about transracial adoption or blended families, this is about a child longing to belong, and the simultaneous feelings of happiness and alienation here ring true. Vogel’s stylized digital illustrations have an appealingly cartoonish look, with googly eyes on both humans and animals. Humorous scenarios (Leo sitting in a restaurant seafood tank; a sea lion in the bathtub with a gull on its head) visually portray the contrasts Leo feels. The happy ending, when Leo’s human family moves to the seaside so people and sea creatures can live together, is perhaps unrealistically optimistic, but this is a story of a child raised by sea lions, after all.

Far-fetched but satisfying. (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: July 1, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-5039-0260-2

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Two Lions

Review Posted Online: April 24, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2018

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