True friends know how to stick together.
Best pals Mr. Stick and Mr. Soft live together in a loft. Slender blue Mr. Stick is composed of “sticky stuff,” while Mr. Soft, made up of “tickly fluff,” resembles an orange pompom. These besties always stick together—literally; thus, their living arrangement, not to mention their friendship, is quite challenging. Sticky complains that Softy’s fluff gets up his nose, and Softy’s had it up to here with Sticky’s “ickiness.” Each blames the other for the impasse: “If only you would shave your fur!” Sticky complains. “It’s YOU who needs to have a wash!” Softy claps back. After sulking, each accepts the other’s suggestion, which grants them unaccustomed freedom. At first, the pair rejoice in being apart. But then reality sets in—and it bites. They can’t share good times anymore. Friends, they wistfully realize, must stay together, literally and metaphorically. This cute U.K. import, expressed in breezy verse that reads well, treads familiar ground, but it’s comforting nevertheless and makes its point effectively: True friends are willing to compromise and overlook each other’s flaws. With their noodlelike limbs and solid bodies, the expressive protagonists are an appealingly strange-looking duo who inhabit a cluttered but cozy setting.
A sweetly offbeat tale of the trials and tribulations of friendship.
(Picture book. 4-7)