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EVIE TO THE RESCUE! by Hermann Moers

EVIE TO THE RESCUE!

by Hermann Moers & illustrated by Gusti & translated by Marianne Martens

Pub Date: Nov. 1st, 1997
ISBN: 1-55858-793-4
Publisher: NorthSouth

Moers (Hugo's Baby Brother, 1992, etc.) comes up with an adventure that seems perfectly in line with what children dream up themselves. On a cold, rainy day, Evie and her mother don slickers and head to the zoo. Evie imagines that the lion cub snuggling with his mother must be chilly. She advises a trip to Africa where it's nice and warm. That night the cub appears in her room asking her to show him the way to Africa. Enterprising Evie thinks of everything: She packs up some stale bread and takes along two carseats. Using the bread as a lure, the pair flag down an enormous swan, who agrees to fly them to Africa. Carseats in place, they soar over mountains and deserts until they find an entire pride of lions in the jungle. Kissing the cub goodbye, Evie heads home, falling asleep on the way. She wakes up in her own bed. Was it all a dream? The tales is nicely paced and plotted, accompanied by lively line-and-watercolor illustrations. Gusti makes wonderful use of light and shadow—especially effective touches are Evie's yellow slicker reflected in a puddle, and the long shadow preceding the lion cub into Evie's room. (Picture book. 5-8)