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THE BOLDS ON VACATION

More amiably subversive, anarchic fun.

When the Bold family (hyenas living incognito as London suburbanites) and friends head to the seaside on holiday, with Bobby disguised as family dog “Stinky,” nothing goes as planned.

The deceit begins when an encounter with a school bully leaves Bobby with a sprained leg. Certain that a doctor would see through his disguise, his parents follow ursine neighbor Mr. McNumpty’s suggestion and take Bobby to a veterinarian instead, overcoming Bobby’s reluctance by letting him choose his name. Still healing, Stinky remains in disguise on the Cornish coast. Meanwhile, the vacation must go on: A sand castle is built, then destroyed; Uncle Tony and Miranda the marmoset prove surprisingly adept at surfing (why is revealed later). Jealous of Bobby’s freedom to express his hyena nature, his twin, Betty, teases him, but when he disappears, she’s as worried as their parents. New friends Pamela, a short-winded puffin (she used to smoke), and dolphins Galileo and his chums don’t hide their animal natures; Bertha, owner of Tiddles Tea Shop, is a cougar. Disguised or not, each assists in the hunt for Bobby. The series’ best illustrations thus far take full advantage of the maritime setting and depict human characters as racially diverse. The genially intrusive narrator throws in a little suspense and points the occasional moral. The Bolds don’t just tolerate difference, they embrace it. Mr. Bold’s ubiquitous, cheerily horrible Christmas-cracker puns should amuse young riddle aficionados along with a few limericks (the sort found in your classier crackers).

More amiably subversive, anarchic fun. (Animal fantasy. 7-10)

Pub Date: May 1, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-5415-0044-0

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Carolrhoda

Review Posted Online: March 3, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2018

Categories:
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WHITE FUR FLYING

A rescued dog saves an unhappy, silent boy in this gentle story about families, fears and courage.

As she did most recently in Waiting for the Magic (2011), Newbery Medalist MacLachlan shows the support that pets can provide. Zoe’s mother fosters abandoned Great Pyrenees dogs. But when Jack, a new dog, runs away, 9-year-old Phillip, a new neighbor, runs after him. He gets lost, but the dog leads him to a barn where they shelter from a night of rain and hail. Phillip’s parents are having problems; he’s staying for a while with a childless aunt and uncle with little experience with children or dogs, and he won’t talk to anyone. Zoe’s family, on the other hand, is close, chatty and compassionate. They care for each other and for their rescued animals: not only the massively shedding white dogs, but also an African grey parrot whose favorite phrase is “You can’t know.” True. There is much you can't know about people and animals both, and much you don’t know, still, after the story ends. Zoe recalls the experience in a narrative occasionally interrupted by ruminative, present-tense glimpses of Zoe with the dogs at night and summed up in her little sister Alice’s concluding journal entry.  The spare prose and extensive dialogue leaves room for the reader’s imagination and sympathy. Beautifully told, quietly moving and completely satisfying. (Fiction. 7-10)  

 

Pub Date: March 19, 2013

ISBN: 978-1-4424-2171-4

Page Count: 128

Publisher: McElderry

Review Posted Online: Dec. 25, 2012

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2013

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MORE THAN A LITTLE

A gentle paean to friendship most suitable for that perfect friend.

A heartfelt “thank you” to a special friend.

Speaking in the first person and addressing an unidentified friend as “you,” the author begins this little tribute by expressing appreciation for all the friend is and does. Assuring the friend that “where you are, things are brighter,” the author adds, “you’re a gem, you’re a peach, you’re a wonderful friend.” Admitting it’s hard to find the right words (even in a “giant…dictionary”), the author asserts the friend is “gooder than good” and “kinder than kind,” and there’s just no way to describe the friend’s inner light and spirit. Indeed, knowing this friend is part of the author’s life “makes even the rainy days feel more alright.” Present on all the author’s “brightest days,” the friend has clearly made “more than a little” difference in the author’s life. The rhyming text adds quiet cadence to this somewhat abstract ode to friendship while precise, small-scale illustrations, rendered in pale tans and greens, provide a visual context featuring a fox and a squirrel wearing old-fashioned shirts and knickers. Each page turn reveals the two friends together: kite-flying, picnicking, gathering honey, fishing, catching fireflies, drinking tea, sheltering under a toadstool, dancing, hopping across lily pads, cycling, swinging, star-gazing, sleeping in hammocks, and sharing all their brightest days surrounded by delicate botanicals.

A gentle paean to friendship most suitable for that perfect friend. (Picture book. 7-10)

Pub Date: June 29, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-970147-44-5

Page Count: 48

Publisher: Compendium

Review Posted Online: April 13, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2021

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