by Laurie Cohen ; illustrated by Barbara Ortelli ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 1, 2015
Simple, evocative text and exquisite illustrations make this one to savor.
An interactive celebration of butterflies and beauty.
“Sometimes butterflies are blue like the sea… / Pink like candy… / Yellow like the sun….” Each double-page spread features a large, delicately rendered watercolor butterfly accompanied by simple objects in the same color family. The final butterfly is white: “It’s plain, isn’t it? But look what happens when a drop of water lands on its wings and rolls around.” Here, a shiny drop of water adorns one of the white butterfly’s wings. On the next double-page spread, a die-cut butterfly is positioned over a multicolored final page, “reflecting all the colors of the rainbow.” This die-cut butterfly as well as the one on the front cover will encourage little ones to experiment with placing different colors and patterns beneath the cutouts to create their own butterflies. For the most part, a pleasing symmetry is achieved as the objects mentioned in the simple, poetic text are pictured along with the butterfly. In a couple of instances, this symmetry is missing (the butterfly “brown as the earth” is surrounded by a scattering of brown leaves, for instance), but this isn’t enough to mar the loveliness of these pages.
Simple, evocative text and exquisite illustrations make this one to savor. (Board book. 1-4)Pub Date: April 1, 2015
ISBN: 978-988-8240-96-8
Page Count: 30
Publisher: minedition
Review Posted Online: May 11, 2015
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2015
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by Laurie Cohen ; illustrated by Toni Demuro
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by Leslie Patricelli ; illustrated by Leslie Patricelli ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 8, 2020
Hits just the right note for fans of the series and newcomers alike.
A stuffed dog (and his baby) are afraid until they realize they have each other.
Patricelli’s instantly recognizable baby—White, still perpetually diaper clad, still with but one hair—from Bigger! Bigger! (2018) and many more is back with an adorable purple stuffed animal named Doggie. From swimming pools to strangers, Doggie gets pretty scared. The baby provides the pup lots of reassurance (including time with baby’s blankie) so that in the end, neither one is too afraid anymore. Adult readers will get a kick out of the fact that Doggie’s fears are actually the baby’s fears. What’s more, readers see the baby trying many of the same calm-down tactics on the stuffed canine that caregivers use on children. Both this device and the first-person narration are clever tools that will play well with little readers who likely share many of the same fears. The black-outlined images stand out against bold, saturated backgrounds, drawn with just enough detail to be interesting but not too busy. The simplicity of the illustrations doesn’t prevent Patricelli from conveying emotion, from the baby’s panic at possibly losing Doggie to the caregiver’s palpable relief at having found it. All of the characters present White save a few background figures. Patricelli’s rhyming Mad, Mad, MAD features the baby expressing anger and ultimately using techniques to work through it.
Hits just the right note for fans of the series and newcomers alike. (Board book. 1-3)Pub Date: Sept. 8, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-5362-0379-0
Page Count: 26
Publisher: Candlewick
Review Posted Online: Oct. 26, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2020
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by Leslie Patricelli ; illustrated by Leslie Patricelli
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by Leslie Patricelli ; illustrated by Leslie Patricelli
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by Leslie Patricelli ; illustrated by Leslie Patricelli
by Elizabeth McPike ; illustrated by Jay Fleck ‧ RELEASE DATE: Dec. 5, 2017
A sweet if uneven expression of parents’ love for babies.
A love song to baby.
Rhyming verse expresses animal parents’ love for their little ones and is accompanied by cartoon-style illustrations of animal families rendered in bold colors and rounded forms. The succinct text pairs nicely with the spare art style, which offers uncluttered spreads focused on the parent-and-child interactions. “You’re everything FRESH, / the morning’s first dew,” reads one spread, for example, which is illustrated with a picture of a panda cub standing on top of its prone parent while reaching for a dewdrop falling from a branch. Behind them, a blue background is warmed by a huge, yellow semicircle representing the rising sun. Other animal families occupy other pages, so there’s no sequential storyline to speak of, but the text as a whole is framed by an opening spread depicting crocodile parents waiting for their (very large) egg to hatch, and hatch it does in the closing spread, which reads, “You’re every wish answered, / our hearts, how they grew… / every day countless, / everything you.” While the sentiment here is heartfelt, this use of “every day countless” is one example of several instances when word choices undermine clarity.
A sweet if uneven expression of parents’ love for babies. (Picture book. 1-3)Pub Date: Dec. 5, 2017
ISBN: 978-0-374-30141-5
Page Count: 32
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Review Posted Online: Aug. 26, 2017
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2017
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by Elizabeth McPike ; illustrated by Jay Fleck
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by Elizabeth McPike ; illustrated by Patrice Barton
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by Elizabeth McPike ; illustrated by Patrice Barton
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