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THE NIGHT PIRATES

POP-UP ADVENTURE

Avast! No treasure is safe from these diminutive daredevils of the deep.

Large pop-ups and multilayered tableaux gas up an already effervescent tale of pirate adventure from 2006.

Young Tom wakes (maybe) to see shadowy figures stealing the entire front from his house. He finds himself joining a crew of “rough, tough little girl pirates” scheming to disguise their ship and steal treasure from Capt. Patch and his grown-up buccaneers. Swinging from hammocks strung from pop-up palm trees, Patch’s scurvy crew turns out to be pushovers when the invaders—brandishing sabers and fiercely buckling swash beneath oversized pirate hats—leap from door and window with a “fearsome roar!” as the climactic spread opens. Tom and the girls then sail off in triumph to hoist both wall and weary boy back into place (more or less, as a final flap reveals). Printed in a range of sizes, the narrative’s type looks thrown into each scene at random, but the text is actually both easy to follow and artfully placed to enhance the melodrama of this rousing moonlit expedition.

Avast! No treasure is safe from these diminutive daredevils of the deep. (Pop-up/picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: June 1, 2013

ISBN: 978-1-4052-5678-0

Page Count: 14

Publisher: Egmont/Trafalgar

Review Posted Online: Sept. 24, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2013

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COWS TO THE RESCUE

In the end, the cows get burnt out, and who can blame them? Then it’s time for the duck to show his stuff—is more hilarity...

A herd of cows repeatedly comes to the rescue of a hapless family on fair day.

Himmelman’s illustrations are such an artful eyeful—snappily colored and gloriously comic—that it is easy to overlook the pleasure of the simple text, a little motor that in many ways drives the whole production forward. The Greenstalk family is headed to the county fair. Throughout the day, they encounter problems: The car won’t start, there aren’t enough contestants for the three-legged race, the Ferris wheel gives one of the children a case of the jitters. Fear not: Cows to the rescue! (Himmelman has also written books featuring rescues by chickens and pigs.) The cows are visually endearing in the extreme, great galumphing beasts with can-do good cheer. For each and every difficulty, there is a successful conclusion: “That wasn’t scary at all,” claims the Ferris wheel fraidy cat; “Thanks for the lift,” says Farmer Greenstalk when the cows ferry the family to the fair. The timing of the “Cows to the rescue!” is such that even the very young will know just when to come yodeling into a read-aloud, which gives the book a fine, uproarious feel and an excellent measure of involvement.

In the end, the cows get burnt out, and who can blame them? Then it’s time for the duck to show his stuff—is more hilarity in the works? (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: Sept. 13, 2011

ISBN: 978-0-8050-9249-3

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Henry Holt

Review Posted Online: June 28, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2011

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GILBERT THE HERO

This fish story smells stale already.

Big brother shark thinks quickly and saves the day.

Gilbert the great white shark wants to take his new little brother, Finn, everywhere with him, but Gilbert's friend Rita Remora wants nothing to do the tyke, who, in her opinion, is too small to play with them. Indeed, Finn struggles on the see-saw and is too slight to play finball. He does like the seaweed swing, which Rita and Gilbert strap him into so that they can go skating. All of a sudden, the sea goes as dark as night and all the fish scatter; it's a killer whale! And he spots Finn, still strapped into the swing. Gilbert grabs the seaweed holding Finn just in time, but the whale doesn't give up. He chases Rita, Gilbert and Finn, who speed to a sunken fishing boat and elude the orca. All seems safe, but Gilbert gets a little panicky when he can't find Finn and Rita. They pop out of a barrel, laughing. Rita and Finn have become friends, and the trio swims off together. This slapdash story of brotherly love is not improved by undistinguished illustrations or a chase scene that feels an awful lot like any number of animated kids’ movies. The copyright page includes interesting facts about sharks, but their placement makes them likely to be overlooked.

This fish story smells stale already.   (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: June 1, 2011

ISBN: 978-1-4027-8040-0

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Sterling

Review Posted Online: April 18, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2011

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