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TWO BICYCLES IN BEIJING

Exploring Beijing from a bicycle’s point of view: a unique concept that doesn’t live up to its potential.

Lunzi the red bicycle races past the sights and sounds of Beijing in search of her friend Huangche, a yellow bicycle.

When Lunzi and Huangche leave the bicycle factory, they sit in a shop window watching the city and its people go by. “They wished they could stay this way forever. But one day,” a young girl comes in and buys Huangche. Soon after, a messenger boy enters the shop and picks Lunzi. The boy hops on and together they weave through narrow alleys called hutongs and race along main streets. They zip by Nanguan Park and the National Art Museum, and they fly by Tiananmen Square. Here and there Lunzi spots a flash of yellow. Is it Huangche? Sadly, no. It’s just a golden kite tail or a patch of chrysanthemums. At the end of the day, the boy stops to buy dinner. As Lunzi leans “against the brick wall with a sigh,” she spots a whoosh of yellow and fills with hope. Robeson introduces readers to basic Mandarin (in romanized pinyin) with the simple refrain “one, two; yi, er” and words like “jie” and “bao.” However, the uneven text—at times lyrical, at times faltering—fails to evoke either Lunzi’s anxiety to find her friend or the buzz and bustle of big city Beijing. Furthermore, Wu’s muted pencil illustrations, while detailed with people and fanciful architecture, don’t pop on the page.

Exploring Beijing from a bicycle’s point of view: a unique concept that doesn’t live up to its potential. (glossary, backmatter) (Picture book. 4-8)

Pub Date: April 1, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-8075-0764-3

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Whitman

Review Posted Online: Jan. 20, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2020

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JOSIE DANCES

Sweetly demonstrates how this traditional dance links the generations.

Josie, a young Ojibwe girl, looks forward to dancing in her first powwow, but she needs some special things before she’s ready.

This intergenerational story reveals the extensive preparation undertaken by the fancy dancer’s entire family to get ready for the biggest event of the year. Josie practices her dance steps for many months while the women in her family devote long hours to creating the regalia she will wear. She asks her mother to sew “a fancy shawl outfit.” She asks her aunty to bead her cape and her grandmother to bead her moccasins and leggings. Most importantly, she asks Grandma Greatwalker, “Will you dream my spirit name?” Each time, her elders respond in Ojibwemowin using the name appropriate to their relationship to her, a pattern that continues throughout. (A glossary is appended.) She practices all winter long, continuing when the “spring birds returned, and Juneberries ripened.” The day of the powwow finally arrives. Her excitement grows as she listens “to drummers practicing, the happy cries of visitors seeing family.” After Josie is dressed and ready, she receives her special honor. From Grandma Greatwalker’s dreams, Josie receives her spirit name: “Migiziinsikwe, Young Eagle Woman!” Colorful illustrations rendered in watercolor show the beauty and intricate patterns of traditional beadwork, birchbark baskets, and fine regalia. Both Lajimodiere and Erdrich are citizens of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa.

Sweetly demonstrates how this traditional dance links the generations. (map, author's note) (Picture book. 4-8)

Pub Date: May 4, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-68134-207-8

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Minnesota Historical Society Press

Review Posted Online: May 4, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2021

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THE SOUR GRAPE

From the Food Group series

Sweet, good-hearted fun.

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A recovering curmudgeon narrates life lessons in the latest entry in the punny Food Group series.

Grape wasn’t always sour, as they explain in this origin story. Grape’s arc starts with an idyllic childhood within “a close-knit bunch” in a community of “about three thousand.” The sweet-to-sour switch begins when Grape plans an elaborate birthday party to which no one shows up. Going from “sweet” to “bitter,” “snappy,” and, finally, “sour,” Grape “scowled so much that my face got all squishy.” Minor grudges become major. An aha moment occurs when a run of bad luck makes Grape three hours late for a meetup with best friend Lenny, who’s just as acidic as Grape. After the irate lemon storms off, Grape recognizes their own behavior in Lenny. Alone, Grape begins to enjoy the charms of a lovely evening. Once home, the fruit browses through a box of memorabilia, discovering that the old birthday party invitation provided the wrong date! “I realized nobody’s perfect. Not even me.” Remaining pages reverse the downturn as Grape observes that minor setbacks are easily weathered when the emphasis is on talking, listening, and working things out. Oswald’s signature illustrations depict Grape and company with big eyes and tiny limbs. The best sight gag occurs early: Grape’s grandparents are depicted as elegant raisins. The lessons are as valuable as in previous outings, and kids won’t mind the slight preachiness. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Sweet, good-hearted fun. (Picture book. 4-8)

Pub Date: Nov. 1, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-06-304541-5

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Harper/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Aug. 30, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2022

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