by Karen English and illustrated by Laura Freeman ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 19, 2009
Little girls, little girls…they can be mean sometimes. Deja’s birthday is coming up, and she is filled with all the anticipation a soon-to-be-eight-year-old can hold. Will her absent father come? Will she get the special ring from her Auntie Dee? Things fall apart when Antonia, Deja’s nemesis, decides to have a “just because” sundae-and-trampoline party at the same time, with the result that everyone chooses Antonia’s party. This straightforward plot explores Deja’s reaction to the unexpected turn and makes few judgments of who is right and wrong. Perhaps Antonia is jealous of Deja and Nikki’s close friendship? Maybe she didn’t sabotage Deja’s party? In the end, when Deja finds out how much she means to her Auntie, she gets the best present of all. A clear typeface, ample white space and Freeman’s occasional black-and-white illustrations make this accessible to new chapter-book readers, although a note printed in unlinked cursive might confuse some. Likable and independent African-American girls are a rare find in early chapter books—let’s hope these two can start a trend. (Fiction. 6-10)
Pub Date: Jan. 19, 2009
ISBN: 978-0-618-97787-1
Page Count: 96
Publisher: Clarion Books
Review Posted Online: June 24, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2008
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by Karen English ; illustrated by Ebony Glenn
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by Sara Pennypacker ; illustrated by Marla Frazee ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 3, 2015
Though looser in weave than previous appearances, still this provides the emotional honesty readers have come to expect
Antic third-grader Clementine faces her biggest challenge yet: looming change.
It’s the last week of school before summer, and everyone is excited except for Clementine, who definitely does not feel ready for fourth grade. Whenever her beloved Mr. D’Matz tries to talk about it, Clementine avoids the subject. Fortunately, she’s got a few things to keep her occupied. Classmates Maria and Rasheed are planning their wedding, and Clementine is deeply involved, acting as proxy wedding planner since her bossy upstairs neighbor, Margaret, is an expert. Her mother is expecting a new baby, “nesting” in ever more comical fashion, and Clementine is working hard on a good name for the tyke. Perhaps hardest of all, vegetarian Clementine is subjecting her father to the silent treatment, since he will not give up meat. While it’s gratifying to see how much Clementine has grown—much as Clementine might herself suspect she hasn’t—this outing doesn’t pack the punch of previous books. The wedding subplot in particular feels superfluous, and both Clementine’s apprehension about change and her insistence on the moral high ground feel deserving of center stage. Still, her ebullience will likely carry readers past this to the valuable understanding that changewillcome and sometimes the best you can hope for is a compromise.
Though looser in weave than previous appearances, still this provides the emotional honesty readers have come to expect (. (Fiction. 6-10)Pub Date: March 3, 2015
ISBN: 978-1-4231-2358-3
Page Count: 192
Publisher: Disney-Hyperion
Review Posted Online: Jan. 9, 2015
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2015
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by Sara Pennypacker ; illustrated by Matthew Cordell
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by Sara Pennypacker ; illustrated by Jon Klassen
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by Suzanne Lang ; illustrated by Max Lang ‧ RELEASE DATE: June 29, 2021
Disappointing.
Grumpy Monkey moves from picture books to a graphic-novel chapter book, in which he tolerates his friends’ goofy antics during a group journey to an orange grove.
Divided into three chapters of cartoon-style comics, with bonus interludes in between, the book features Jim Panzee, the protagonist of the Grumpy Monkey picture-book series. He is on his relaxing Wednesday Walk, stress orange in hand, but little is quiet about his journey once his jungle friends appear. After the accumulation of unwanted companions causes Jim to squeeze his stress orange so hard that he destroys it, the group seeks a replacement, stopping for a papaya fight, a splash party in the water, and some swinging from vines. They eventually escape angry parrots with the only orange the parrots didn’t devour. There’s a good dose of potty humor: Leslie the giraffe responds to Norman the gorilla’s invitation to come along with “you bet your butt I do,” and two spreads are devoted to poop humor (with Jim as the butt of the joke). There’s also wordplay (a chapter called “Orange Ya Glad We Made It?”; Jim’s repeated mantra, “Squeeze, squeeze, mind at ease”; and a guide to speaking Jim’s nonsense language, in which the syllable ob is inserted before vowels in every word). That the book pauses for a “Primate Primer” with talking simians will be like pouring lemon juice on a cut for those readers who see in anthropomorphized monkeys a perpetuation of pernicious anti-Black stereotypes.
Disappointing. (Graphic fiction. 6-10)Pub Date: June 29, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-593-30601-7
Page Count: 88
Publisher: Random House
Review Posted Online: March 30, 2021
Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2021
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by Suzanne Lang ; illustrated by Max Lang
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by Suzanne Lang ; illustrated by Max Lang
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by Suzanne Lang ; illustrated by Max Lang
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