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DON'T ASK THE DRAGON

A confusing jumble of images and symbols, for all that it may inspire deep thoughts.

A small boy looking for a home on his birthday finds it in an unexpected place.

In a hand-lettered and occasionally rhyming ramble, Sissay has solitary young Alem—portrayed in Stobbs’ lambent paintings as a round-headed, brown-skinned child symbolically (as it turns out) carrying a stack of small buildings on his back—asking a bear, a fox, and other animals where he should go to find a home and getting only a chorus of “I don’t know” and the titular warning in reply. The story then takes an even sharper turn to the allegorical as a huge but benign dragon arrives to invite Alem to tea, inform him that his name means “The World” (as it does, in Arabic), then point him toward a welcoming town that, apparently, the boy had left in the first scene and is named, according to the dragon, “I Don’t Know.” “Home was always inside him,” is what Alem ultimately concludes. The boy’s backpack, a lighthouse visible in several backgrounds, and other ambiguously meaningful details make the illustrations more inscrutable than clarifying, and worthy as that last insight is, the way he reaches it will likely leave readers feeling as if they’ve missed a few steps. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A confusing jumble of images and symbols, for all that it may inspire deep thoughts. (Picture book. 6-9)

Pub Date: June 7, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-83885-398-3

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Canongate

Review Posted Online: March 29, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2022

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LOST AND FOUND

Readers who (inexplicably) find David Lawrence’s Pickle and Penguin (2004) just too weird may settle in more comfortably...

A lad finds a penguin on his doorstep and resolutely sets out to return it in this briefly told import. 

Eventually, he ends up rowing it all the way back to Antarctica, braving waves and storms, filling in the time by telling it stories. But then, feeling lonely after he drops his silent charge off, he belatedly realizes that it was probably lonely too, and turns back to find it. Seeing Jeffers’s small, distant figures in wide, simply brushed land- and sea-scapes, young viewers will probably cotton to the penguin’s feelings before the boy himself does—but all’s well that ends well, and the reunited companions are last seen adrift together in the wide blue sea. 

Readers who (inexplicably) find David Lawrence’s Pickle and Penguin (2004) just too weird may settle in more comfortably with this—slightly—less offbeat friendship tale. (Picture book. 6-8)

Pub Date: Jan. 1, 2006

ISBN: 0-399-24503-0

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Philomel

Review Posted Online: June 24, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2005

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WHAT THE ROAD SAID

Inspiration, shrink wrapped.

From an artist, poet, and Instagram celebrity, a pep talk for all who question where a new road might lead.

Opening by asking readers, “Have you ever wanted to go in a different direction,” the unnamed narrator describes having such a feeling and then witnessing the appearance of a new road “almost as if it were magic.” “Where do you lead?” the narrator asks. The Road’s twice-iterated response—“Be a leader and find out”—bookends a dialogue in which a traveler’s anxieties are answered by platitudes. “What if I fall?” worries the narrator in a stylized, faux hand-lettered type Wade’s Instagram followers will recognize. The Road’s dialogue and the narration are set in a chunky, sans-serif type with no quotation marks, so the one flows into the other confusingly. “Everyone falls at some point, said the Road. / But I will always be there when you land.” Narrator: “What if the world around us is filled with hate?” Road: “Lead it to love.” Narrator: “What if I feel stuck?” Road: “Keep going.” De Moyencourt illustrates this colloquy with luminous scenes of a small, brown-skinned child, face turned away from viewers so all they see is a mop of blond curls. The child steps into an urban mural, walks along a winding country road through broad rural landscapes and scary woods, climbs a rugged metaphorical mountain, then comes to stand at last, Little Prince–like, on a tiny blue and green planet. Wade’s closing claim that her message isn’t meant just for children is likely superfluous…in fact, forget the just.

Inspiration, shrink wrapped. (Picture book. 6-8, adult)

Pub Date: March 23, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-250-26949-2

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Feiwel & Friends

Review Posted Online: April 7, 2021

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