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ONLY YOU

This parent-child love poem reaches out and cuddles its dual audience close. The simple verse celebrates the small, everyday ways small children endear themselves to their parents: “When the sky glows / peachy-rose at dawn . . . / I love the way / you stretch and yawn,” and so on through one idyllic day, visiting in turn an Asian-American mother and baby at daybreak, an African-American father and toddler in the middle of the day and a European-American mother and preschooler at bedtime. Cruise’s text is unapologetically doting, the truth behind every statement manifest in each rhyme and carrying the whole beyond cliché. Chodos-Irvine’s now-trademark prints are the wholly perfect accompaniment, their soft pastels and rounded lines underscoring the genuine warmth of the sentiment. Her understanding of the exuberant movements of baby- and toddler-hood is unparalleled, each cock of the head and bend of the arm just right. What child doesn’t need the unqualified love of the parent, and what parent doesn’t need to be reminded of this? As a statement of childhood’s most unalienable right, it doesn’t come any clearer. (Picture book. 3-5)

Pub Date: April 1, 2007

ISBN: 0-15-216604-1

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Harcourt

Review Posted Online: June 24, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2007

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A PIGLET NAMED MERCY

Younger siblings of the Mercy chapter-book lovers will find their way into the series with this first look, written just for...

To paraphrase an immortal spider, Mercy is some pig.

Mercy Watson, a “small and not at all ordinary” pig, is already the star of six early chapter books, well-known for her love of buttered toast and, of course, of Mr. and Mrs. Watson, the white couple who care for her. But how did Mercy come to live with the Watsons? And how did they discover her love for buttered toast? Written simply for the pre–chapter-book audience, with big, bright, often full-spread illustrations, this picture book offers an introduction to Mercy, “the porcine wonder,” with all the dramatic expressions and gentle humor of the chapter books and some irresistible pig cuteness sprinkled in for extra charm. Vivid colors cause each illustration to pop, with a retro style to the Watsons’ rosy cheeks, classic car, and rather traditional gender roles (Mrs. Watson vacuums, Mr. Watson polishes the car). An unnamed interracial family seen through a window references two characters introduced as school-age children in the fourth installment of the chapter-book series: Frank and Stella, he as a toddler and she as a baby. Since the target audience for this outing will have no familiarity with them, their presence mostly serves to underscore the otherwise all-white human cast.

Younger siblings of the Mercy chapter-book lovers will find their way into the series with this first look, written just for them . (Picture book. 3-5)

Pub Date: April 2, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-7636-7753-4

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Candlewick

Review Posted Online: Feb. 16, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2019

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NIGHT NIGHT, GROOT

A title comics aficionados will snap up in order to groom the next generation of fandom—even if they don’t have a next...

It’s time for bed, Baby Groot—but Rocket Raccoon thinks otherwise!

Gamora reads a bedtime story to baby Groot in his flowerpot: “Night night, Groot, it’s time for bed. / Time to rest your sleepy head. // The day was long and filled with fun. / Think of all the things you’ve done.” Rocket grabs Groot’s hand and tells him the Earth is in danger. They run past Captain America and the other Avengers to their spaceship and blast off while the bedtime story continues. In action-filled spreads, they attack bad guys with the help of Red Hulk and She Hulk. More bad guys get kicked and beaten when Thor and Black Panther help out. Doctor Strange, Moon Knight, and the Guardians of the Galaxy team join the fight, and the night is won! “The day is now done and super friends say… / Night night, Groot. / You’ve had a wonderful day.” Deneen’s narrative has a consciously genre-appropriate anodyne text, but Rocket’s asides in speech bubbles and Groot’s “I am Groot”s will elicit more giggles and cheers than sleep—not to mention the energetic sound effects. Peopled with the stars of the Marvel universe, each brightly colored double-page spread of bad-guy bopping has at least one cameo or visual joke. All the superheroes and even the villains are just as supercute as baby Groot.

A title comics aficionados will snap up in order to groom the next generation of fandom—even if they don’t have a next generation yet. (Picture book. 3-5)

Pub Date: April 4, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-4847-3282-3

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Marvel Press

Review Posted Online: Jan. 31, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2017

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