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THE CONSTRUCTION CREW

From the Finn's Fun Trucks series

Constructive fun for young hard hats everywhere.

This Q-and-A guide presents five essential construction-site vehicles and explains the special functions of each.

Young heavy-equipment enthusiasts will enjoy this simple primer on the attributes and uses of the trucks a construction crew uses to build the structures that dot the urban landscape. A racially diverse crew of one female and four male construction workers presents each vehicle: “This is a bulldozer. Can you guess what it does?” The facing page shows a bulldozer, with three identifying parts labeled: “cab,” “blade,” and “track.” A gatefold opens to reveal the answer: “The bulldozer pushes dirt around and flattens the ground to make room for new buildings.” This pattern repeats with an excavator, a cement mixer, a dump truck, and a crane; a final spread shows what happens when they all work together: “We can build brand new buildings in our city!” In addition to expanding the vocabulary of machinery-loving children, the book suggests the complexity of creating the cities in which we live and the value of working together. The artwork features simple, brightly colored images against backgrounds of geometric patterns or colorful watercolor washes. The drawings are easily read, if somewhat plain and cartoonish, and opening the flaps to reveal the pictures underneath will keep young readers engaged. Companion title The Clean-up Crew publishes simultaneously.

Constructive fun for young hard hats everywhere. (Board book. 2-6)

Pub Date: March 13, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-4867-1387-5

Page Count: 14

Publisher: Flowerpot Press

Review Posted Online: May 22, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2018

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I'LL LOVE YOU FOREVER

Parent-child love and affection, appealingly presented, with the added attraction of the seasonal content and lack of gender...

A polar-bear parent speaks poetically of love for a child.

A genderless adult and cub travel through the landscapes of an arctic year. Each of the softly rendered double-page paintings has a very different feel and color palette as the pair go through the seasons, walking through wintry ice and snow and green summer meadows, cavorting in the blue ocean, watching whales, and playing beside musk oxen. The rhymes of the four-line stanzas are not forced, as is the case too often in picture books of this type: “When cold, winter winds / blow the leaves far and wide, / You’ll cross the great icebergs / with me by your side.” On a dark, snowy night, the loving parent says: “But for now, cuddle close / while the stars softly shine. // I’ll always be yours, / and you’ll always be mine.” As the last illustration shows the pair curled up for sleep, young listeners will be lulled to sweet dreams by the calm tenor of the pictures and the words. While far from original, this timeless theme is always in demand, and the combination of delightful illustrations and poetry that scans well make this a good choice for early-childhood classrooms, public libraries, and one-on-one home read-alouds.

Parent-child love and affection, appealingly presented, with the added attraction of the seasonal content and lack of gender restrictions. (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: Sept. 1, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-68010-070-9

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Tiger Tales

Review Posted Online: July 1, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2017

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IN A GARDEN

Like its subject: full of bustling life yet peaceful.

Life buzzes in a community garden.

Surrounded by apartment buildings, this city garden gets plenty of human attention, but the book’s stars are the plants and insects. The opening spread shows a black child in a striped shirt sitting in a top-story window; the nearby trees and garden below reveal the beginnings of greenery that signal springtime. From that high-up view, the garden looks quiet—but it’s not. “Sleepy slugs / and garden snails / leave behind their silver trails. / Frantic teams of busy ants / scramble up the stems of plants”; and “In the earth / a single seed / sits beside a millipede. / Worms and termites / dig and toil / moving through the garden soil.” Sicuro zooms in too, showing a robin taller than a half-page; later, close-ups foreground flowers, leaves, and bugs while people (children and adults, a multiracial group) are crucial but secondary, sometimes visible only as feet. Watercolor illustrations with ink and charcoal highlights create a soft, warm, horticulturally damp environment. Scale and perspective are more stylized than literal. McCanna’s superb scansion never misses, incorporating lists of insects and plants (“Lacewings, gnats, / mosquitos, spiders, / dragonflies, and water striders / live among the cattail reeds, / lily pads, and waterweeds”) with description (“Sunlight warms the morning air. / Dewdrops shimmer / here and there”). Readers see more than gardeners do, such as rabbits stealing carrots and lettuce from garden boxes.

Like its subject: full of bustling life yet peaceful. (author’s note) (Picture book. 3-6)

Pub Date: Feb. 18, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-5344-1797-7

Page Count: 48

Publisher: Paula Wiseman/Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: Nov. 9, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2019

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