illustrated by Tiago Americo & Julia Mercier & Paku & Benjamin Bécue ; translated by Ariane Laine-Forrest ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 1, 2017
Unwieldy but consistently (amazingly, considering the square footage) inventive in scenarios and details. Bring a magnifier...
In this supersized Where’s Waldo?–style French import, cutaway views teem with tiny figures and silly business.
The brain-bending bustle begins “Inside Buildings,” with a row of apartment houses festooned with hundreds of residents in over 50 rooms, on the street, and up on the roofs. Tenacious searchers are challenged to spot 50 particular items or people, but there’s a lot more to see: here a fire; there a flood; elsewhere Peter Pan swooping in to pick up Wendy, a marriage proposal, a tattoo artist at work, two gents sharing a hot tub under the stars, a living room concert, parties, pet chases, and more. The action continues in eight further populous locales, from “Inside the Hospital” to “Inside the Library,” with 10 recurring figures—including a potted plant with a face and a bodybuilder in a thong—to add to new items. The big-headed, toylike tiny humans are all roughly the same size, so children and grown-ups are often indistinguishable, and though most are white, many have light or dark brown skin, and some appear to be Asian.
Unwieldy but consistently (amazingly, considering the square footage) inventive in scenarios and details. Bring a magnifier and a bottle of Visine. (Novelty. 4-10)Pub Date: July 1, 2017
ISBN: 978-2-7338-4684-1
Page Count: 20
Publisher: Auzou Publishing
Review Posted Online: Aug. 6, 2017
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2017
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by Benjamin Bird ; illustrated by Tiago Americo
by Adam Lehrhaupt ; illustrated by Magali Le Huche ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 12, 2017
Best for readers who have clearly indicated they would like to take their writing efforts to the next level.
A young white girl writes and illustrates a story, which is critiqued by the narrator as it is created.
The girl begins her story by drawing a Hero. Then she thinks maybe a Heroine would be better. Then she decides both will work. She places them in “a good town, filled with good people, called our Setting.” The narrator, an unseen editor who lurks over the artist’s shoulder, tells the storyteller she needs to put in some Conflict, make the Evil Overlord scarier, and give it better action. This tongue-in-cheek way of delivering the rules of creative writing is clever, and paired with Le Huche’s earnest, childlike illustrations, it seems to be aimed at giving helpful direction to aspiring young creators (although the illustrations are not critiqued). But the question needs to be asked: do very young writers really need to know the rules of writing as determined by adults? While the story appears to be about helping young readers learn writing—there is “A Friendly List of Words Used in this Book” at the end with such words as “protagonist” and “antagonist” (glossed as “Hero and Heroine” and “Evil Overlord,” respectively)—it also has a decidedly unhelpful whiff of judgment. Rules, the text seems to say, must be followed for the story to be a Good one. Ouch.
Best for readers who have clearly indicated they would like to take their writing efforts to the next level. (Picture book. 6-10)Pub Date: Sept. 12, 2017
ISBN: 978-1-4814-2935-1
Page Count: 40
Publisher: Paula Wiseman/Simon & Schuster
Review Posted Online: July 1, 2017
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2017
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by Adam Lehrhaupt ; illustrated by Carrie O'Neill
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by Adam Lehrhaupt ; illustrated by Rahele Jomepour Bell
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by Adam Lehrhaupt ; illustrated by Benson Shum
by Caroline Adderson ; illustrated by Stéphane Jorisch ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 7, 2020
A rollicking tale of rivalry.
Sweet Street had just one baker, Monsieur Oliphant, until two new confectionists move in, bringing a sugar rush of competition and customers.
First comes “Cookie Concocter par excellence” Mademoiselle Fee and then a pie maker, who opens “the divine Patisserie Clotilde!” With each new arrival to Sweet Street, rivalries mount and lines of hungry treat lovers lengthen. Children will delight in thinking about an abundance of gingerbread cookies, teetering, towering cakes, and blackbird pies. Wonderfully eccentric line-and-watercolor illustrations (with whites and marbled pastels like frosting) appeal too. Fine linework lends specificity to an off-kilter world in which buildings tilt at wacky angles and odd-looking (exclusively pale) people walk about, their pantaloons, ruffles, long torsos, and twiglike arms, legs, and fingers distinguishing them as wonderfully idiosyncratic. Rotund Monsieur Oliphant’s periwinkle complexion, flapping ears, and elongated nose make him look remarkably like an elephant while the women confectionists appear clownlike, with exaggerated lips, extravagantly lashed eyes, and voluminous clothes. French idioms surface intermittently, adding a certain je ne sais quoi. Embedded rhymes contribute to a bouncing, playful narrative too: “He layered them and cherried them and married people on them.” Tension builds as the cul de sac grows more congested with sweet-makers, competition, frustration, and customers. When the inevitable, fantastically messy food fight occurs, an observant child finds a sweet solution amid the delicious detritus.
A rollicking tale of rivalry. (Picture book. 4-8 )Pub Date: July 7, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-101-91885-2
Page Count: 44
Publisher: Tundra Books
Review Posted Online: April 7, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2020
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by Caroline Adderson ; illustrated by Roman Muradov
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by Caroline Adderson ; illustrated by Alice Carter
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