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SHORT STORIES FOR LITTLE MONSTERS

Frivolity for surface amusement with a touch of poignancy for pondering.

Nineteen short stories explore some enormously funny ideas.

Ideas are big and things are often more than they seem in each of these brief vignettes, which are divided like chapters. One story shows snails having anxious nightmares about going too fast; another has a mother who foils her children’s bedtime games with her ability to see through ceilings; and still another explores the secret life of rabbits as they enjoy a whimsical subterranean wonderland. Although the diverse cast of characters seems to occasionally appear across multiple narratives, each of the stories is separate and self-contained, allowing readers to decide if and how the snapshot vignettes might be connected. Nearly all of the stories are paneled, employ speech bubbles, and are presented in sweeping double-page spreads, providing an early primer for readers working their way toward graphic novels, as the author’s frenetic, childlike illustrations and deceptively simple narratives each hit with a potent humor just this side of nonsense. Readers searching for an anchor of plot among the playful absurdity may find themselves a little disoriented, but fans of Louis Sachar’s Wayside School stories and Shel Silverstein’s repertoire of drawings will delight as this picture book joins their ranks.

Frivolity for surface amusement with a touch of poignancy for pondering. (Picture book. 3-7)

Pub Date: March 14, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-55498-896-9

Page Count: 48

Publisher: Groundwood

Review Posted Online: Dec. 20, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2017

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UNLIKE OTHER MONSTERS

A quirky friendship story with lots of humor.

A young monster breaks a taboo against friendship—kind of.

Zander’s a normal monster (except for having a sister who’s a fairy—a strange detail that’s part of the book’s deadpan whimsy). And like a normal monster, he doesn’t have friends, though the illustrations imply he longs for connection. However, there’s apparently no injunction against fairies having friends, and his sister has plenty. Instead, Zander enjoys normal monster activities such as scaring children (which the illustrations hilariously suggest fills him with a wicked glee) and...surfing. While surfing, Zander notices a bird watching him. They silently greet each other with nods and points of the chin for a couple days until Zander invites the bird to the sand, whereupon the other monsters notice and mock Zander about his “friend.” Zander denies the friendship, and the hurt-looking bird wings away...but returns the next day. With information gleaned from his sister about friends, the next time he’s mocked, Zander decides that he and the bird aren’t friends—they don’t do everything his sister and her friends do (like “give money to kids who’ve lost teeth”)—they just enjoy spending time together. Jack’s colorful, humorous art makes for active illustrations and engaging characters, aptly complementing Vernick’s gently speculative text. The book ends without explicit acknowledgment of Zander’s friendship with the bird or his desire for closeness, allowing readers to digest the message.

A quirky friendship story with lots of humor. (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: July 12, 2016

ISBN: 978-1-4231-9959-5

Page Count: 48

Publisher: Disney-Hyperion

Review Posted Online: April 12, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2016

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THE NOT SO QUIET LIBRARY

Lively, detailed, endearing, and bold, the images and text create an unforgettable reading experience for book digesters...

Saturday is library day, and Dad is bungee-cording a warehouse worth of books to the roof of his already jam-packed car. The first stop, however, is the bakery, as “a day of quiet exploration requires a proper breakfast.”

A dark-haired, pink-skinned boy named Theodore and his “brother,” Oskar the bear, head to the library’s children’s room while Dad escorts himself upstairs to the “nap department.” All is as it should be until a five-headed monster named Seymour, Chuck, Winston, Pat, and Bob arrives, armed with mustard, whipped cream, sprinkles, and hot sauce. It chows down on fiction and nonfiction alike, but despite the condiments, the books still taste yucky to this five-headed picky eater. When the monster slavers in the direction of the kids, Oskar saves the day (and Theodore) with a secret cache of doughnuts he’s stashed under his hat. Tamed by the doughnuts and capable, dark-skinned, storytelling librarian Ms. Watson, this scaly vortex of chaos apologizes for its bad behavior with a hilarious allusion to low blood sugar. The monster acknowledges that books sound better than they taste and repurposes its raison d’être to library maintenance—pink rubber gloves and all. This droll, tongue-in-cheek romp is a snortfest, from cranky librarian Mr. Tasker to blinged-out head Winston. OHora’s signature flat acrylic illustrations strike gold once again.

Lively, detailed, endearing, and bold, the images and text create an unforgettable reading experience for book digesters everywhere. (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: July 19, 2016

ISBN: 978-0-80374-1409

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Dial Books

Review Posted Online: April 12, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2016

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