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PENGUIN IN LOVE

Readers will respond to this warm tale of finding love.

Little does Penguin know that a couple of matchmaking puffins have hatched a plan to aid him in finding love in this third adventure (Penguin on Vacation, 2013).

Yoon executes yet another warm tale pairing an engaging narrative for young readers with illustrations in saturated hues that pop with bright colors against the cool backgrounds. “One day Penguin was looking for love. / Instead, he found… // a mitten.” After a fruitless search to find its owner, he decides to get out some yarn and knit a mate. Elsewhere, his friend Bootsy is also knitting. Readers will recognize that what Bootsy is calling a “snout cozy” resembles Penguin’s mitten. Two sharp-eyed puffins make the same observation and decide to play matchmaker by stealing the penguins’ yarn and laying a trail for them to “unravel…together.” As they follow yarn trails with heart-shaped curlicues, they knit for warmth, fun, comfort and their friends until a blizzard separates them. They travel back, following their respective trails of yarn; a double-page spread shows them on opposite sides of the same very tall mountain (having knit cozies and scarves for lesser peaks along the way). When they reach the top, they realize they “had pulled right into each other’s hearts.”

Readers will respond to this warm tale of finding love. (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: Dec. 3, 2013

ISBN: 978-0-80273-600-0

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Walker

Review Posted Online: Sept. 17, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 2013

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THE WOLFPACK WAY

Light on story but delivers an uplifting message all the same.

In FIFA Women’s World Cup soccer champion Wambach’s latest, children are urged to be themselves.

Wambach turned her popular 2018 commencement address at Barnard College into a New York Times bestselling book for adults—Wolfpack (2019), an inspirational treatise that encouraged readers to be themselves and dream big. A second adaptation was published for a middle-grade audience, and now comes the picture book, which breaks down Wambach’s message into a series of simple, declarative statements about taking on adventures, facing fears, and being true to oneself, because “you are a Wolf—and that’s the Wolfpack way.” The eight-point Wolfpack way, which is strung throughout the book and organized as a list at the end, is all good Chicken Soup for the Soul–esque advice, from “create your own path” to “let kindness lead the way.” A rallying cry, “we can do hard things,” appears on a hat worn by one of the children in Rahmalia’s boldly colored illustrations, which provide the basic storyline: A racially diverse ensemble of kids (including one who uses a wheelchair) traverse their neighborhood, board a school bus, spend the day at school doing a variety of activities (including playing soccer), board the bus again for home and dinner, then perform in a musical together. Although the text is somewhat didactic, the presentation of a group of children respecting and supporting one another is a welcome contrast to the U.S.’s divided, conflicted society.

Light on story but delivers an uplifting message all the same. (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: Oct. 8, 2024

ISBN: 9781250766854

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Roaring Brook Press

Review Posted Online: Aug. 3, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2024

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STRAW

From the Spoon series

Doesn’t quite hit the spot

A cautionary tale about making experiences last.

The riotous utensil community Rosenthal and Magoon introduced in Spoon (2009) and continued in Chopsticks (2012) returns for a series conclusion starring a blue-and-white–striped bendable straw who “has a great thirst for being first.” Straw slurps up everything in sight, from the water in a flower bowl to a cup of tea, while friends look on in dismay. Since nobody else seems to be competing with Straw, both his fervor and their unhappiness feel ungrounded. But when Straw tries to speed through an icy drink, he’s laid low by brain freeze and “his heart sank,” an awfully dramatic response. Straw’s friend, a novelty straw with loop-de-loop eyes, helps him appreciate the pleasures of taking in life slowly, and Straw is forever changed, suddenly appreciating the colors, textures, and experiences in the world. At bedtime, a parent kisses him and explains that “what you’re feeling is called awe, Straw.” By the end, “sometimes he still wants to be first. But most of the time, Straw wants to make the good things last.” Magoon’s energetic cartoon illustrations are fun to look at, but the lengthy story drives its point into the ground, and neither the problem nor the resolution is interesting enough to convince hasty children to slow down their central nervous systems.

Doesn’t quite hit the spot . (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: Feb. 4, 2020

ISBN: 978-148474955-5

Page Count: 48

Publisher: Disney-Hyperion/LBYR

Review Posted Online: Sept. 28, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2019

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