by Vicki Spandel ; illustrated by Jeni Kelleher ‧ RELEASE DATE: June 1, 2020
A beautifully written and illustrated feline tale with subtle emotional depths.
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A cat hungry for adventure discovers that his destiny lies closer to hearth and home in this chapter book.
Swayed by an aging tomcat’s tales of seafaring derring-do, orange tabby kitten Rufus dreams of a world beyond his tame life with Mama Cat and his siblings. Adopted by gentle Mrs. Lin, Rufus is happy to be her affectionate companion until his first birthday brings an acute itch to roam and uncover his destiny. But after a near-fatal forest encounter with maddened nesting geese, the wandering feline is content to settle in with his rescuer, Mr. Peabody. A lonely poet with writer’s block, Mr. Peabody finds peace and the renewal of his creative drive in Rufus’ comfortable presence until he learns that his furry friend, “Mr. Cat,” is the subject of Mrs. Lin’s desperate “missing cat” notice in the newspaper. This feline-centric yet deeply human and adult-friendly novel for children is the first work of fiction by Spandel, a prolific author best known for instructional books on writing for classrooms and workshops. May it not be her last. The author’s well-drawn characters are shaped by empathy, not sentiment, and by her near-poetic observations of the minutiae in their lives (Mrs. Lin’s garden and kitchen; Mr. Peabody’s books and herbal teas) and of the natural world around them. Rufus, beginning his journey with an explorer’s bravado, sees a “familiar wooded landscape transformed into a patchwork of meadows and wetlands. Carpets of purple asters and yellow marsh marigolds rolled out in all directions as the sun spilled the last of its light across the water and littoral mud flats….The world was reaching out its arms, enveloping the young swashbuckler in its embrace.” How Rufus stays in the lives of both his loving caretakers and discovers his true purpose are movingly answered through the wisdom of an unexpected and memorable source: Asha, a battered rescue cat, scarred but not broken by rough living. The text is richly complemented by Kelleher’s pastel paintings of animals and ambient settings. Among the book’s endmatter: Mr. Peabody’s recipe for crab cakes and his poem dedicated to the absent Asha, promising to “keep an extra blue plate at the table always…for when you bring your wild heart home.”
A beautifully written and illustrated feline tale with subtle emotional depths.Pub Date: June 1, 2020
ISBN: 978-0-9972831-3-6
Page Count: 122
Publisher: Teaching That Makes Sense
Review Posted Online: Jan. 8, 2021
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2021
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Dianna Hutts Aston & illustrated by Sylvia Long ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 18, 2011
Similar butterfly albums abound, but none show these most decorative members of the insect clan to better advantage....
Another interwoven flight of poetry, natural history and lovely art from the creators of An Egg Is Quiet (2006) and A Seed Is Sleepy (2007).
Beneath hand-scripted headers that sometimes take license with facts but create lyrical overtones (“A butterfly is creative”), Aston offers specific and accurate descriptions of metamorphosis, pollination, camouflage, migration and other butterfly features and functions, along with the differences between butterflies and moths. Imagination-stretching comparisons—“monarchs weigh only as much as a few rose petals,” the wingspan of the Arian Small Blue is “about the length of a grain of rice”—lend wings to the body of facts, and though the author avoids direct mention of reproduction or death, a quick closing recapitulation that harks back to the opening page’s hatching egg provides an artful hint of life’s cyclical pattern. With finely crafted, carefully detailed close-up watercolors, Long depicts dozens of caterpillars and butterflies, each one posed to best advantage, unobtrusively labeled and so lifelike that it’s almost a surprise to page back and find them in the same positions.
Similar butterfly albums abound, but none show these most decorative members of the insect clan to better advantage. (Informational picture book. 8-10)Pub Date: May 18, 2011
ISBN: 978-0-8118-6479-4
Page Count: 40
Publisher: Chronicle Books
Review Posted Online: April 18, 2011
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2011
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by Kate Messner & illustrated by Brian Floca ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 1, 2011
Believable and endearing characters in a realistic elementary-school setting will be just the thing for fans of Clementine...
When the promised land of third grade does not pan as promised, Marty McGuire finds herself playing a completely new role.
Mrs. Aloi, her maracas-shaking teacher, is putting together the parts for the class play of The Frog Prince, and she decides that Marty is perfect for the part of the princess. Marty, who prefers learning about frog anatomy to kissing or, worse, throwing a frog, is horrified. She gets little support from her scientist mother or her teacher father—a princess she shall be! On top of this bad news, Marty’s best friend has joined the girly-girl group and does not seem interested in playing outside and pretending to be Jane Goodall anymore. Messner gets all the details of third grade right: the social chasm between the girls who want to be like the older kids and the ones who are still little girls, the Mad Minutes for memorizing arithmetic facts, the silly classroom-control devices teachers use and the energy students of this age put into projects like class plays. Floca’s black-and-white sketches are filled with movement and emotion and are frequent enough to help new chapter-book readers keep up with this longer text.
Believable and endearing characters in a realistic elementary-school setting will be just the thing for fans of Clementine and Ramona. (Fiction. 7-10)Pub Date: May 1, 2011
ISBN: 978-0-545-14244-1
Page Count: 144
Publisher: Scholastic
Review Posted Online: April 5, 2011
Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2011
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