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THE CRAZY FRIEND

From the Ginger Green, Playdate Queen series

Sweet, fun, and a little flawed.

In Kane and Davis’ (The New Friend, 2016) second collaboration, play-date queen Ginger Green invites an unconventional friend over, and she has regrets immediately.

Seven-year-old fox Ginger takes great pride in her play-date setups, and she is excited for the next one with classmate Maisy. Almost immediately, though, Ginger is on the back foot as Maisy gets up to some unexpected antics: overexcited doorbell-ringing, enthusiastic nudity, and reckless roof-climbing chief among them. Ginger (not to mention her mother) is flummoxed at first but soon becomes angry—not the best mood for a play date. After Maisy returns to the ground and both have had some soothing lemonade, the girls do a few handstands and flips, and Ginger remembers that she loves her friend precisely because she always does the unexpected. Adding a dash of drama and danger to the social dilemma of playing hostess the series explores, this chapter book navigates the complex maze of developing friendships and the negotiation of compatibility. Uncluttered, grayscale illustrations provide cues without becoming distracting for new readers. That said, readers turned off by discriminatory terms such as “crazy” (used sparingly but significantly here) or notions that difference is linked to danger may want to try a different installment of the series.

Sweet, fun, and a little flawed. (Chapter book. 6-8)

Pub Date: April 1, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-5158-1953-0

Page Count: 64

Publisher: Picture Window Books

Review Posted Online: Feb. 2, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2018

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SCORE ONE MORE

From the I Like To Read series

Teamwork and camaraderie are strong factors in any soccer game.

Sam advocates for his friend, May, by allowing her to play on his soccer team after she’s been told she cannot join in.

The game continues and everyone takes a participatory role. “Lin kicks the ball. // They run. / They pass. // We block. But we do not get the ball. // Lin kicks again. / She gets it in. ‘Score!’ they yell.” Short declarative sentences, just one or two per page, with a controlled vocabulary build to provide suspense and excitement from each team’s perspective. The carefully crafted first-person text repeats a core list of words in a variety of sentences that move the action along, allowing more-proficient new readers to feel accomplished. Sam and May eventually get the ball back to succeed in a winning score. “I need to score one more. / It is up to me. May yells, ‘Kick it in, Sam!’ // But I pass the ball to May. / I will let her try. // May kicks. // May scores! // We win!” Simple, finally outlined cartoon characters include a multiracial cast—Sam presents white while May has brown skin and straight, black hair—in varying soccer poses that serve as good picture cues for the action described. The modest story is poignant in its underlying message of inclusion and supportive friendship.

Teamwork and camaraderie are strong factors in any soccer game. (Early reader. 6-8)

Pub Date: April 7, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-8234-4514-1

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Holiday House

Review Posted Online: Feb. 8, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2020

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A BOY LIKE YOU

This visually buoyant book may well succeed at redirecting gender expectations—though not bending them.

The title answers a question: What does the world need?

In simple, aphorism-laced language, Murphy offers a positive vision of masculinity that focuses on what he dubs “ ‘inside’ strength”—the sort that privileges kindness, respect for self and for others, knowing when to ask for help, and daring to dream big. He begins with guidelines for right behavior on the playing field (“Say ‘Nice goal!’ and ‘Good try!’ / Don’t say ‘You throw like a girl.’ Ever”). With the heartily welcome reminder that “there’s so much more than sports,” he goes on to suggest that spending time in a garden, kitchen, or science lab, playing music, reading or writing stories can all be just as valid and satisfying. Likewise showing consideration for others, working toward goals, and finally realizing that “the best you / is the you that is ALL you…. / Not a little you and a little someone else.” Harren adds life and color to this earnest but not exactly electrifying advice in vignettes depicting a black lad with mobile features and interracial parents playing or otherwise posing in various settings amid a thoroughly diverse cast of peers, pets, and passersby. The figures, human and otherwise, are rendered with fetching individuality that really comes out in group scenes…particularly on the closing pages, where the illustrator lines up smiling young children, including girls, in informal rows.

This visually buoyant book may well succeed at redirecting gender expectations—though not bending them. (Picture book. 6-8)

Pub Date: July 15, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-53411-046-5

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Sleeping Bear Press

Review Posted Online: May 25, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2019

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