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BUMBLE-ARDY

Edgier than Sesame’s original, this contains all the layered meaning that makes Sendak’s books readable over and over....

A master reincarnates his old Sesame Street cartoon with a dark pathos and fascinating manic energy.

As one of the original architects of gleeful mischief and serious woe in modern picture books, Sendak employs both here. “Did you know / That Bumble-Ardy missed / Eight birthdays in a row?” opens the narration, the weeping porcine protagonist placing trotter to forehead. His original family “frowned on fun” and then (being pigs) “got ate,” landing Bumble with adoptive “Adeline, that aunt divine.” Luckily, “Bumble-Ardy had a party when he was nine.” A pleasant, mild illustration shows Adeline in their slatted, open-air house presenting cake and gift, Bumble murmuring “Yippee!” But emotional complexity lurks: Bumble’s eyes are red-rimmed, and nearby animals look gloomy and skeptical. Adeline gone to work, Bumble (permission-less) invites “grubby swine // To come for birthday cake and brine.” Costumes evoke Bread & Puppet and Cinco de Mayo at this rambunctious masquerade ball; partiers revel with sinister gusto. During the multi-spread rumpus, rhyme sneaks onto signs: “Cheers! / Cheers! / Cheers! / May Bumble live 900 years!” When furious Adeline ejects the guests, her face morphs into a horror mask, but then she “Took in her Bumble valentine / And kissed him nine times over nine. // Now, ain’t that fine?” Children and parents both will require many trips through to even begin to accommodate the emotional shifts here.

Edgier than Sesame’s original, this contains all the layered meaning that makes Sendak’s books readable over and over. (Picture book. 4 & up)

Pub Date: Sept. 6, 2011

ISBN: 978-0-06-205198-1

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Michael di Capua/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: June 28, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2011

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DEAR DUCK, PLEASE COME!

A gently comedic picture book for preschoolers and kindergartners with wiggly teeth.

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Duck frantically searches for a friend’s lost tooth in this latest picture book from Mackenzie.

Piney Glen resident Duck finds his usually cozy existence interrupted when he receives a letter in his mailbox that reads: “Dear Duck, please come! I lost my tooth. Your friend, Rabbit.” Duck responds enthusiastically to this call to action, searching everywhere for the missing tooth. He encounters Badger in the meadow and enlists the animal’s help as they move toward the pond. Soon they happen upon Turtle, a comically slow speaker who recommends searching the woods. There, they discover Squirrel, who leads the ever-growing group toward the clearing. Mouse rereads the note there and urges the animal posse to visit Rabbit and ask him directly about his tooth. But the group’s plans are frustrated when they find that Rabbit had intended an entirely different scenario all along. This is a sweet, funny story about the consequences of a simple misunderstanding; it’s great for fans of A.A. Milne’s Winnie the Pooh (1926), among other similar children’s stories. Mackenzie expertly balances advancing the narrative by repeating search scenes that reinforce the meanings of over, under, and aroundto help young readers build their prepositional vocabularies. Santoso’s soft-textured illustrations enhance the story and add humor, especially in the panels where Turtle joins the party but isn’t fast enough to keep up.

A gently comedic picture book for preschoolers and kindergartners with wiggly teeth.

Pub Date: Jan. 7, 2025

ISBN: 9781956393118

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Waxwing Books

Review Posted Online: Sept. 12, 2024

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HOW TO TEACH A SLUG TO READ

Pearson is a slug intimate, having previously charted the course of two Slugs in Love (illustrated by Kevin O'Malley, 2006), so who better to explain, exactly, the best way to teach a slug to read? It is really quite elementary, starting with opening the book (make sure it has slug characters), read it to the slug, point out repeating words, help sound them out, get a vocabulary list going, underline favorite words and, you bet, “[r]ead your slug’s favorite poems to him as many times as he wants. Read him other books too!” This slug’s favorite is Mother Slug’s book of poetry, with such old gems as “Mary had a little slug, / His skin was smooth as silk” and “Whatever can the matter be? / Sally Slug has climbed a tree” and “Sweet Sammy Slug / Slides through the town.” Slonim’s upbeat illustrations give readers a sense that they are there with the slugs, flipping the pages, while the interjections from the slugs—“Sl-uh-uh-g! Hey, I can read SLUG!”—convey, with a light hand, the joys of reading. And though it isn’t cricket to diminish a slug’s capabilities, readers can’t help but feel that if a slug is up to the task, well then, maybe someone else in the room is, too. (Picture book. 4-8)

Pub Date: Feb. 1, 2011

ISBN: 978-0-7614-5805-0

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Marshall Cavendish

Review Posted Online: Jan. 8, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2011

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