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PRINCESS KITTY

A far meow from purr-fectly original.

Princess Kitty’s attendants throw a party in her honor. Ooh la la!

“My name is Princess Kitty. My attendants have only one job…taking care of ME! They know just what I need.” The orange puss’s attendants are Anna, her baby sibling, and their parents, a white family. Princess Kitty’s overblown narration expresses her perspective, but the illustrations tell another story. She lives in a palace (revealed to be a middle-class home), but she knows her ancestors used to be worshipped. Princess Kitty feels worshipped now. She discovers her attendants are throwing a party for her in a week’s time (readers see it’s actually a sixth birthday party for Anna). Each day Princess Kitty does something to prepare. Monday’s activity is ballet class (jumping from shelf to bed); Thursday’s is a massage (slightly too vigorous attention from baby brother); and Friday brings delicacies from afar (Chinese takeout). Princess Kitty’s guests (aka Anna’s friends) arrive on Saturday, and Princess Kitty manages, at least in her mind, to make it all about her. Metzger’s pampered Princess Kitty joins a long line of pets who see their lives slightly differently than their humans do. While Okstad’s bright, cartoon, digitally colored illustrations appropriately and humorously clash with Princess Kitty’s understanding, the contrast is not as broad nor the activities described as consistent as is necessary for real guffaws.

A far meow from purr-fectly original. (Picture book. 3-7)

Pub Date: Oct. 17, 2017

ISBN: 978-0-06-230662-3

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Harper/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Aug. 1, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2017

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TWINKLE, TWINKLE, LITTLE STAR

A nursery charmer.

A pink-cheeked version of a song most everyone knows, with new verses highlighting cozy animal dyads across the world.

The bright yellow and red owlet with its parent opens the lullaby with the verse we all know. Next a papa deer and fawn in the forest, a whale and calf in the sea, a kangaroo and joey in the outback, vulture and chick and so on, each filling a two-page spread. The verse mirrors the pictures: “Glisten, glisten, little star, / how I wonder what you are. / Up above the grassy plain …” shows a papa lion and cub, and on the next spread—“…through the warm, wet jungle rain”—a pair of rosy-cheeked monkeys. The five-pointed, butter-gold star is prominently visible on every spread. Color and line are thick and bold, while all of the animals, from polar bears to pussy cats, have button eyes and the suggestion of human smiles. The final verse (“Twinkle over towns and trees, / fields and farms, / Lakes and seas”) shows just such a vista, with lollipop trees, a building-block city and a little red lighthouse. The concluding spread, “Twinkle, twinkle, up above … // … for me and for / the one I love” pictures that bright star on one page facing a golden-haired mother and child. The music for this venerable tune is on the back endpaper.

A nursery charmer. (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: Aug. 15, 2012

ISBN: 978-0-8234-2519-8

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Holiday House

Review Posted Online: June 12, 2012

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2012

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I NEED A HUG

This is a tremendously moving story, but some people will be moved only on the second reading, after they’ve Googled “How to...

A hug shouldn’t require an instruction manual—but some do.

A porcupine can frighten even the largest animal. In this picture book, a bear and a deer, along with a small rabbit, each run away when they hear eight simple words and their name: “I need a hug. Will you cuddle me,…?” As they flee, each utters a definitive refusal that rhymes with their name. The repetitive structure gives Blabey plenty of opportunities for humor, because every animal responds to the question with an outlandish, pop-eyed expression of panic. But the understated moments are even funnier. Each animal takes a moment to think over the request, and the drawings are nuanced enough that readers can see the creatures react with slowly building anxiety or, sometimes, a glassy stare. These silent reaction shots not only show exquisite comic timing, but they make the rhymes in the text feel pleasingly subtle by delaying the final line in each stanza. The story is a sort of fable about tolerance. It turns out that a porcupine can give a perfectly adequate hug when its quills are flat and relaxed, but no one stays around long enough to find out except for an animal that has its own experiences with intolerance: a snake. It’s an apt, touching moral, but the climax may confuse some readers as they try to figure out the precise mechanics of the embrace.

This is a tremendously moving story, but some people will be moved only on the second reading, after they’ve Googled “How to pet a porcupine.” (Picture book. 3-5)

Pub Date: Jan. 29, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-338-29710-2

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Scholastic

Review Posted Online: Sept. 29, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2018

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