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LOOK FOR LADYBUG IN OCEAN CITY

A bright and bubbly outing for confident seek-and-find fans.

An errant ladybug once again wanders off to lead animal detectives Daisy (a pink-and-brown–striped rabbit) and Basil (a blue lizard with red baseball cap worn backward) on a merry chase.

It was tough enough to Look for Ladybug in Plant City (2017)—here, the undersea realm offers 10 more big, populous, and bewilderingly busy sites artfully designed to conceal the mischievous mite from searching eyes. As if the challenge of picking Ladybug out from the swirling plethora of small, red, spotted sea creatures in each scene weren’t enough, Manolessou tucks in dozens of additional figures to winkle out. Readers are prompted to find (among others): one crab on a swing in Octopus Gardens and another wearing eight hard hats at a building site; an octopus holding four brushes near the thermal vent spa (featuring signs for various attractions as “Salt Scrubs” and “Mud Jacuzzis” as well as slogans urging visitors to “Go With the Flow” and “Let Your Hair Down”); a Portrait of a Fish With a Pearl Earring at the Ocean City Museum; and five sea snakes in every picture. Happily, the perky pet rejoins the exhausted detectives at the end (briefly, anyway)…and equally happily, the author provides a visual key to stave off incipient eyestrain in young viewers.

A bright and bubbly outing for confident seek-and-find fans. (Picture book. 5-7)

Pub Date: May 5, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-78603-776-3

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Frances Lincoln

Review Posted Online: March 28, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2020

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SOMETHING'S FISHY

An ideal lead-in to more specific guides to aquarium setup and fish care.

A first introduction to our planet’s finny residents, particularly the decidedly uncommon goldfish.

Preceded by an entire piscatorial ABC that extends over six pages, two children of color lecture an audience of house pets (and readers) about such typical fishy features as scales and gills—properly noting that some fish, like certain eels, have no scales and some, like hagfish, no bony spines. The two then zero in on goldfish, explaining that they are easier to keep at home than tropical fish, originated long ago in China, can recognize the faces of people who bring them food, and with proper care live 25 years. All of this information is presented in a mix of dialogue balloons and single lines of commentary in block letters, accompanying cleanly drawn cartoon illustrations that alternate between a domestic setting and labeled portraits of various fish rendered in fine, exact detail. With easily digestible doses of biological and historical background, common-sense cautionary notes, and a buoyant tone, this is an appealing dive for newly independent readers out to enhance the household menagerie.

An ideal lead-in to more specific guides to aquarium setup and fish care. (Informational picture book. 5-7)

Pub Date: April 4, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-943145-15-7

Page Count: 40

Publisher: TOON Books & Graphics

Review Posted Online: Feb. 13, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2017

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WOLF PUPS JOIN THE PACK

From the First Discoveries series

A bland also-ran trailing a large litter of like-themed pups.

A photo album of young wolves running, playing, and growing through their first year.

Light on factual details, the uncredited text largely runs to vague observations along the lines of the fact that “young wolves need to rest every now and then” or that packs “differ in size. Some are large and have many wolves, while others are small with only a few.” The chief draws here are the big, color, stock photos, which show pups of diverse ages and species, singly or in groups—running, posing alertly with parents or other adult wolves, eating (regurgitated food only, and that not visible), howling, patrolling, and snoozing as a seasonal round turns green meadows to snowy landscapes. In a notably perfunctory insertion squeezed onto the final spread, a wildlife biologist from the American Museum of Natural History introduces himself and describes his research work—all with animals other than wolves. Budding naturalists should have no trouble running down more nourishing fare, from Seymour Simon’s Wolves (1993) to Jonathan London’s Seasons of Little Wolf (illustrated by Jon Van Zyle, 2014) and on. Baby Dolphin’s First Swim follows the same formula even down to profiling exactly the same wildlife biologist.

A bland also-ran trailing a large litter of like-themed pups. (Informational picture book. 5-7)

Pub Date: June 6, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-4549-2237-7

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Sterling

Review Posted Online: April 25, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2017

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