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BUNNY DREAMS by Peter McCarty

BUNNY DREAMS

by Peter McCarty ; illustrated by Peter McCarty

Pub Date: Jan. 5th, 2016
ISBN: 978-0-8050-9687-3
Publisher: Henry Holt

Rabbits have group dreams—very peculiar ones.

At first, this animal tale appears fairly traditional: bunnies hop around a flowery field among bees and butterflies, hunkering down to eat carrots, radishes, and lettuce. “What do bunnies know?” They know to run from the farmer’s dog “even if he only wants to play,” and here things begin to feel uncanny. The enormous dog resembles the bunnies more than it does any canine, possessing tiny feet but virtually no legs, which highlights the fact that these bunnies, too, lack legs for their wee feet. They flee the friendly dog like a synchronized fleeing team, all in the same position, seeming to skim above the ground, which is solid white background. Diving into burrows, they again glide through air without touching soil. A chicken inexplicably joins them. When they sleep, their group dreams involve bees, butterflies, and a large dog—understandably—but also ABCs, 123s, and school supplies, which seem to arise from nowhere. A section about writing their names, with one bunny denying that his name is Bobby (who said it was?), is as peculiar as real dreams. McCarty shades his animals with smooth, fine lines, and their round eyes are almost electric. However, figures seem static even when moving, and the general lack of groundedness and gravity is more surreal than satisfying.

Arbitrary and lacking closure, this is more like a real dream than a sleepy-time tale.

(Picture book. 4-7)