Next book

MARA THE SPACE TRAVELER

Skip this flight of fancy.

Sleepless Mara climbs out her window onto her roof and dreams of saving another planet while on a space adventure.

First published in 2019 in Belgium and the Netherlands as Mauro de ruimtereiziger. Op zoek naar een nieuwe planeet, this simple allegory describes a visit to a beautiful garden planet. The extraterrestrials Mara meets there (tiny lizards who, curiously, morph so that they resemble her two-legged shape) tell her their concerns. The Sun King’s love is burning the garden into desert. “The garden NEEDS me!” the Sun King shouts at Mara when she goes to deliver her alien friends’ request that he look away. Happily, she escapes to an underwater realm where water creatures create a “wondrous wave” that sweeps over the desert, forcing the Sun King to back off. Mara is grateful; the aliens are grateful; and Mara sets off for home in her imagined space ship. Plans for constructing a ship as well as sketches of her alien friends are included as an afterword. In Leysen’s pastel images, Mara and all the creatures on the world she visits have wide, manga eyes. The text has been smoothly translated by the publisher. Sadly, a distracting mixture of pedestrian typefaces, both serif and sans-serif, mars the presentation. Young readers who might appreciate the voyage will be put off by the tiny print that carries much of the narrative.

Skip this flight of fancy. (Picture book. 5-9)

Pub Date: June 16, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-60537-527-4

Page Count: 56

Publisher: Clavis

Review Posted Online: April 7, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2020

Next book

THE ADVENTURES OF HENRY WHISKERS

From the Adventures of Henry Whiskers series , Vol. 1

Innocuous adventuring on the smallest of scales.

The Mouse and the Motorcycle (1965) upgrades to The Mice and the Rolls-Royce.

In Windsor Castle there sits a “dollhouse like no other,” replete with working plumbing, electricity, and even a full library of real, tiny books. Called Queen Mary’s Dollhouse, it also plays host to the Whiskers family, a clan of mice that has maintained the house for generations. Henry Whiskers and his cousin Jeremy get up to the usual high jinks young mice get up to, but when Henry’s little sister Isabel goes missing at the same time that the humans decide to clean the house up, the usually bookish big brother goes on the adventure of his life. Now Henry is driving cars, avoiding cats, escaping rats, and all before the upcoming mouse Masquerade. Like an extended version of Beatrix Potter’s The Tale of Two Bad Mice (1904), Priebe keeps this short chapter book constantly moving, with Duncan’s peppy art a cute capper. Oddly, the dollhouse itself plays only the smallest of roles in this story, and no factual information on the real Queen Mary’s Dolls’ House is included at the tale’s end (an opportunity lost).

Innocuous adventuring on the smallest of scales. (Fantasy. 6-8)

Pub Date: Jan. 3, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-4814-6575-5

Page Count: 144

Publisher: Aladdin

Review Posted Online: Sept. 18, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 2016

Next book

THE PIRATE PIG

A nifty high-seas caper for chapter-book readers with a love of adventure and a yearning for treasure.

It’s not truffles but doubloons that tickle this porcine wayfarer’s fancy.

Funke and Meyer make another foray into chapter-book fare after Emma and the Blue Genie (2014). Here, mariner Stout Sam and deckhand Pip eke out a comfortable existence on Butterfly Island ferrying cargo to and fro. Life is good, but it takes an unexpected turn when a barrel washes ashore containing a pig with a skull-and-crossbones pendant around her neck. It soon becomes clear that this little piggy, dubbed Julie, has the ability to sniff out treasure—lots of it—in the sea. The duo is pleased with her skills, but pride goeth before the hog. Stout Sam hands out some baubles to the local children, and his largess attracts the unwanted attention of Barracuda Bill and his nasty minions. Now they’ve pignapped Julie, and it’s up to the intrepid sailors to save the porker and their own bacon. The succinct word count meets the needs of kids looking for early adventure fare. The tale is slight, bouncy, and amusing, though Julie is never the piratical buccaneer the book’s cover seems to suggest. Meanwhile, Meyer’s cheery watercolors are as comfortable diagramming the different parts of a pirate vessel as they are rendering the dread pirate captain himself.

A nifty high-seas caper for chapter-book readers with a love of adventure and a yearning for treasure. (Adventure. 7-9)

Pub Date: June 23, 2015

ISBN: 978-0-385-37544-3

Page Count: 80

Publisher: Random House

Review Posted Online: March 16, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2015

Close Quickview