by Makayla L. Tyler Cheryl K. Greer ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 11, 2018
A well-intentioned manual that offers uneven advice.
Seven personified character traits teach lessons about respect and other values in this debut children’s guide written by a girl and her grandmother.
Tyler and Greer’s book aims “to promote good manners, positive character traits, and a safe environment for children.” Rarely for such works, Tyler is a child herself, age 9 at the time of writing, giving her perhaps an edge with her peers. The “WORLD FIGHTERS FOR CHARACTER TRAITS” consist of seven human members—Joyful, Love, May, Pixie, Zach, Nikki, and DJG—plus one animal, Candy Cane Cat. They all appear young, somewhat in the chibi style of Japanese illustration, with oversized heads, huge eyes (when not winking or covered by an eye patch), and tiny limbs. They have a range of skin tones, hair colors, and clothing/accessories and a few oddities, like Nikki’s fangs and DJG’s eye patch and face mask (unexplained). Although there’s some differentiation, the team’s traits tend to overlap. Love is considerate; Joyful is well-mannered; and Pixie is helpful. May is compassionate; Joyful is caring; and Nikki is supportive. Zach actually joins the team after the group’s first mission, which transforms him from a bully and teaches him compassion. Two other operations teach respect and integrity. The timely book’s values are stated clearly, and the human cast is wonderfully diverse. But the transformation process raises some questions. In Zach’s case, Candy Cane Cat recommends giving him a “love shower,” which works instantly. It’s an appealing thought but sets the unlikely expectation that changing someone’s behavior is easy and fast and also suggests that stopping bullying is up to kids. Usually experts recommend getting adults to intervene, reserving kindness for the child being bullied. Respect and integrity are instilled with similar ease: for example, “I will transform the students….The students are transformed.” Another goal is to teach roots, prefixes, and suffixes of values-based vocabulary, but this sometimes stumbles on inconsistencies, such as defining “authored” as “With, together, joint,” which actually defines the prefix “co.” And “author” shouldn’t include the suffix “-ed.”
A well-intentioned manual that offers uneven advice.Pub Date: Oct. 11, 2018
ISBN: 978-1-4897-1849-5
Page Count: 34
Publisher: LifeRichPublishing
Review Posted Online: Feb. 15, 2019
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Cynthia Rylant ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 1, 1999
This latest in an early-reading series from Rylant, featuring the everyday adventures of Poppleton the pig, is as wry and supple as other entries, with the added charm of familiarity. In three stories, Poppleton’s pal Cherry Sue serves as a safety net to the pig’s minor misadventures. The first is a bit of nonsense involving geese flying south; Poppleton invites them in for cookies, but chatting and serving so many geese exhausts him so that he can only utter gibberish when he drops by Cherry Sue’s, and succumbs to a nap. When Poppleton seeks a new winter coat, Zacko the ferret haberdasher insults the pig for his rotundity. Cherry Sue, reminding Poppleton that Zacko is a ferret, after all, with a radically different perspective on big and small, gives her friend a catalog for big and tall pigs. Lastly, Cherry Sue saves Poppleton’s bacon at the Lion’s Club pancake breakfast. If the prose invites a merry, humorous reading, Teague, hitting the illustrator’s equivalent of a perfect stride, provides wonderful scenes that conduct beginning readers through the story. (Picture book. 2-7)
Pub Date: Sept. 1, 1999
ISBN: 0-590-84789-9
Page Count: 56
Publisher: Scholastic
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 1999
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by Cynthia Rylant ; illustrated by Arthur Howard
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by Cynthia Rylant ; illustrated by Arthur Howard
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by Cynthia Rylant ; illustrated by Arthur Howard
by Phoebe Stone ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 1, 1999
Emily Louise is certain that the new girl moving in next door will be simply awful. Working herself into a frenzy (in long passages of text that take the conceit just about as far as it can go), she imagines a terror of a child named Shelley Boo who is a swing swiper, eats nothing but peanut butter, has “drillions and drillions” of baseball cards, and steals Emily’s best friend, Henry. Stone’s exuberant color drawings, filled with whimsical animals and reminiscent of folk art, are less effective here than in What Night Do Angels Wander? (1998). Children will still identify with Emily’s anxiety about a new neighbor and share her relief when she finally does meet the infamous “Shelley Boo,” who is really named Elizabeth. (Picture book. 4-8)
Pub Date: Sept. 1, 1999
ISBN: 0-316-81677-9
Page Count: 32
Publisher: Little, Brown
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 1999
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