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ROSY COLE’S WORST EVER, BEST YET TOUR OF NEW YORK CITY

Effervescent Rosy has been eagerly looking forward to giving her country mouse cousin, Duncan, the Big Apple adventure tour of a lifetime, packed with every tourist landmark imaginable. So she’s horrified when a pale fearful child “with a barf bucket around his neck” and strict instructions from his mother to “avoid strange foods that could be . . . full of unknown ingredients” emerges from the airplane. Not one to be daunted by a lack of enthusiasm, Rosy plunges ahead with her busy agenda, but plan after plan is derailed. As Rosy becomes increasingly frustrated, Duncan loosens up, playing his harmonica on the street, trying exotic foods, and getting into what he calls “Hot Pot New York,” a rich broth of people from different cultures who each add their own unique spice to the mix. Greenwald, who also provides humorous line illustrations, delivers her message with a light comic touch that younger readers are sure to enjoy. (Fiction. 7-10)

Pub Date: Aug. 14, 2003

ISBN: 0-374-36349-8

Page Count: 128

Publisher: Melanie Kroupa/Farrar, Straus & Giroux

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2003

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YOURS SINCERELY, GIRAFFE

This is a rare book: joyful, ingenuous, playfully earnest, but without a whiff of studied cuteness.

Giraffe, bored and looking for a friend, becomes pen pals with Penguin in this illustrated chapter book.

Even though Giraffe has nice weather and plenty to eat in his home in Africa, he is bored because he doesn’t have “an extra special friend.” A notice from an also-bored pelican offering “to deliver anything anywhere” spurs Giraffe to write a letter introducing himself (“I’m famous for my long neck”), and he asks Pelican to deliver it to the first animal he meets on the “other side of the horizon.” After a long flight, Pelican sees Seal. Seal delivers the letter to Penguin, since Penguin is “the only animal…who got letters….Most were from his girlfriend.” This original, playful story unfolds with perfect pacing as Giraffe and Penguin start a pen-pal correspondence. (Penguin, not sure what a neck is, writes back: “I think maybe I don’t have a neck. Or maybe I am all neck?”) Giraffe and Pelican, reading Penguin’s letters describing himself, are just as confused about what Penguin looks like. Hilarious deductive reasoning ensues. Young readers will love the silliness. Older readers (including adults) will relax in this gentle, judgment-free world of curiosity and discovery. Takabatake’s fresh, unaffected line illustrations create a seamless collaboration of art and words.

This is a rare book: joyful, ingenuous, playfully earnest, but without a whiff of studied cuteness. (Fantasy. 7-10)

Pub Date: April 1, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-9272-7188-9

Page Count: 104

Publisher: Gecko Press

Review Posted Online: Feb. 3, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2017

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KONDO & KEZUMI REACH BELL BOTTOM

From the Kondo & Kezumi series , Vol. 2

A gently whimsical rumination about compromise and friendship.

Stormy waters await two friends on the high seas.

In this follow-up to Kondo & Kezumi Visit Giant Island (2020), best pals Kondo and Kezumi are back in their tiny boat, sailing toward new adventures. Kondo wants to stick with their plans to visit Spaghetti Island, but Kezumi is easily distracted by nearby wonders. Her curiosity piqued, she longs to follow schools of carrot-colored, long-eared sea jumpers bounding out of the water and to explore a mysterious rusty ship. Kondo, however, is frustrated by Kezumi’s constant diversions, wishing to stay on course. When the duo shipwrecks on a strange new island, their tensions come to a head, and each stomps off angrily in opposite directions. Kezumi finds an immense broken warning bell and wants to fix it but cannot move it without Kondo’s help; will they be able to reconcile and work together? Adhering to stereotypes, Kondo, the yellow male character, is markedly larger and stockier than female Kezumi, who is orange, frilled, and slight. This quibble aside, Goodner and Tsurumi’s tale offers many alluringly adorable two-page illustrated spreads, with text divided into readably short chapters. The pacing pulls readers along like a swift current, and worldbuilding is playful and unexpected, dialing up the imagination and creating a new dimension for this tried-and-true friendship tale.

A gently whimsical rumination about compromise and friendship. (Fantasy. 7-10)

Pub Date: Jan. 5, 2021

ISBN: 978-0-7595-5473-3

Page Count: 80

Publisher: Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: Nov. 17, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2020

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