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THE CROCODILE AND THE DENTIST

This fun (for readers) dental visit has underlying lessons of empathy, bravery, and good oral hygiene.

Crocodile has a toothache and goes to see the dentist, but each is afraid of the other.

When Crocodile realizes his tooth hurts, he knows he has to go to the dentist, but he’s afraid. The dentist knows he has to fix Crocodile’s tooth, but he doesn’t want to. They are both scared but choose to be brave and go on with the appointment. The dentist reaches into Crocodile’s mouth and looks at the cavity. Crocodile accidentally bites down on the dentist’s arm when he touches the sore tooth. (It’s not much of a bite, as there is no evident injury.) They both decide to move forward and not get angry about being hurt. In the end, the tooth is fixed, and they are in perfect agreement that neither wants to see the other again—so both are determined that Crocodile “remember to brush [his] teeth!” Using the same words for both the doctor’s and Crocodile’s perspectives, Gomi shows how different people can experience the same emotions, and the characters’ faces and body language emphasize those feelings. With a bold purple, teal, and brown color scheme, the illustrations are done in Gomi’s trademark style. The dentist—the only human character—has dark tan skin and black hair.

This fun (for readers) dental visit has underlying lessons of empathy, bravery, and good oral hygiene. (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: Aug. 21, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-4521-7028-2

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Chronicle Books

Review Posted Online: May 22, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2018

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COUNTING CREATURES

Engaging, rewarding, and utterly delightful.

Readers count from one to 10 and then jump from there to 15, 20, and 25 in this picture book featuring creatures in the wild.

Animals and their babies take the stage in this paper-engineered tale that allows young readers to make surprise discoveries. On the first spread, they meet a bat. Lift up the precisely die-cut bat’s wing to see “1 baby / Holding on tight as they fly through the night.” Page turns are propelled by the query that concludes each and every spread: “Who has more babies than that?” Continuing to count upward, readers meet leopard cubs, owlets, fox kits, leverets, caterpillars, and many more animals. Creatively designed flaps and die cuts, as well as pages with nontraditional trims, invite young hands to lift, peek, and search: Lift leaf-shaped flaps to see “8 baby mice”; peek through tree-trunk–shaped die cuts to see a forest with “15 poults”; and turn pages shaped like verdant hills to see “2 lambs.” The rhymes are unfussy, pleasingly rhythmic, and have unfailingly flawless meter (“9 ducklings / Swimming and snacking, / Practicing quacking”). Richly colored illustrations in vivid crimson, sapphire, marble green, and copper hues feature realistic animals in their natural habitats, though most are given sleek, wide, stylized eyes. The final spread throws readers a curveball with “LOTS of spiderlings,” depicted as die-cut holes with eight legs each on the previous page—and, it turns out, many of the pages before that.

Engaging, rewarding, and utterly delightful. (Picture book/novelty. 3-6)

Pub Date: Nov. 17, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-593-32453-0

Page Count: 58

Publisher: Dial Books

Review Posted Online: Dec. 24, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2021

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DON'T COPY ME!

Young children acquainted with the pleasure of conspiring to annoy an older child and those who've suffered the indignity of...

Here's Little Puffin, minding his own business and enjoying a walk when a trio of impish gull chicks turn up and start mimicking his every move.

How can he stop Small Gull, Tiny Gull and Baby Gull from annoying him? He tries to scare them and outrun them before he finally tries to turn the tables on them by sitting very still. The little ones eventually fidget from boredom and walk away. But when Little Puffin moves on, it starts all over again. The creator of the Baby Owl books (I'm Not Scared!, 2007, etc.), captures both the playful spirit and the exasperation of this familiar game with clean, bold lines and clear colors against a white background. The game begins on the cover with "Don't Copy Me!" in large, fire-engine–red letters echoed by soft shading. There's a stern, no-nonsense look on Little Puffin's face as he towers over the little gulls, whose eager expressions show just how unperturbed they are. There's plenty of humor in the pacing of the predictable text, uncluttered pages and Allen's appealingly fluffy, wide-eyed birds.

Young children acquainted with the pleasure of conspiring to annoy an older child and those who've suffered the indignity of being made fun of will enjoy seeing just who outsmarts whom. (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: April 1, 2012

ISBN: 978-1-907967-20-7

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Boxer Books

Review Posted Online: Feb. 28, 2012

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2012

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