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HARRY AND CLARE'S AMAZING STAYCATION

A clever bit of conflict resolution, nonviolent and broadly applicable.

On a rainy week of vacation, Harry finds a way to loosen his bossy big sister’s grip on playtime scenarios.

On Monday, the two go to Mars, “which looked a lot like the family room, except for the volcanoes.” Because Harry sinks in quicksand, Clare eats his snack. On following days she not only gets to be race car driver, pirate queen, and school principal, but she appropriates his snacks again. When the penny finally drops, he starts stockpiling small treats in his pocket—so that when skies clear and the children hit the jungle (“It looked a lot like the park, except for the vines and wild animals”), he’s in a position to win concessions from his snackless sib: “I’ll share. But I think the treasure is in a cave under a mountain.” Says Clare, “Okay. But there’s still a monster octopus in the cave.” Staunton’s tongue-in-cheek text displays both great respect for the imagination of children and affection for his characters. In simply drawn line-and-color illustrations, Song artfully blends ordinary household and playground details into adventuresome settings until at last steering the pair homeward past “prehistoric park-bench dinosaur skeletons” and deadly “squirrel sharks.” The children are black-haired and light-skinned; the “Kimono dragons” they ride hint at Asian ancestry.

A clever bit of conflict resolution, nonviolent and broadly applicable. (Picture book. 6-8)

Pub Date: Feb. 7, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-77049-827-3

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Tundra Books

Review Posted Online: Dec. 13, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2017

Categories:
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MY FOOTBALL FAMILY

A heartfelt forward pass from one generation to the next (and the next).

A pigskin-themed paean to family and family traditions.

As images depict a football-shaped newborn growing up, marrying, and helping to produce another—the second actually dressed in a football onesie, which is adorable—sports podcaster Holloway notes rookie season fumbles and triumphs, team huddles on the sofa to watch the big games, the passage of quarters and seasons, and major life events (like the wedding: “One day you may get drafted / To a franchise of your own”). All the while, Holloway promises to cheer from the sidelines in victory or defeat, to be there when needed, and to give each “wonderful expansion / of our football family” both a welcome and proper coaching. The family in Jang’s shiny, reasonably realistic illustrations includes three children. The verse’s language is nonspecific enough to apply to offspring of any gender as well as adoptees. In school settings and on playing fields of several sorts, the child, at various ages, light-skinned like their parents, joins a diverse group of peers, including one wearing a hijab and another who uses a hearing aid, while the child’s own family includes a dark-skinned sibling and, by the end, a child with, like their spouse, Asian features. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A heartfelt forward pass from one generation to the next (and the next). (Picture book. 6-8)

Pub Date: Aug. 30, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-250-84715-7

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Roaring Brook Press

Review Posted Online: May 10, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2022

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THE ONE AND ONLY SPARKELLA AND THE BIG LIE

From the Sparkella series , Vol. 3

An awesome-tastic invitation to have or share thoughts about bad and better choices.

Actor Tatum’s effervescent heroine steals a friend’s toy and then lies about it.

Thrilled about an upcoming play date with new classmate Wyatt, Sparkella considers her own sparkly stuffies, games, and accessories and silently decides that he’d be more interested in her friend Tam’s remote-controlled minicar. While she and Tam are playing together, Sparkella takes the car when Tam isn’t looking. Tam melts down at school the next day, and Sparkella, seeing her “bestest friend” losing her sparkle, feels “icky, oogy, and blech.” And when Wyatt comes over, he turns out to be far more entranced by glittery goods than some old car. When Sparkella yells at him—“WYATT, YOU HAVE TO PLAY WITH THIS CAR RIGHT NOW!”—her dad overhears and asks where the toy came from…and along with being a thief, Sparkella turns out to be the worst. Liar. Ever. She eventually confesses (her dad forgives her), apologizes (ditto Wyatt and even Tam), and goes on to take part in a three-way play date/sparklefest. Her absolution may come with unlikely ease, but it’s comfortingly reassuring, and her model single dad does lay down a solid parental foundation by allowing that everyone makes mistakes and stressing that she is “never going to be punished for telling the truth in this house.” He and Sparkella present White, a previous entry cued brown-skinned Tam as Asian, and Wyatt has brown skin in Barnes’ candy-hued pictures. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

An awesome-tastic invitation to have or share thoughts about bad and better choices. (Picture book. 6-8)

Pub Date: May 30, 2023

ISBN: 9781250750778

Page Count: 48

Publisher: Feiwel & Friends

Review Posted Online: Feb. 24, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2023

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