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TWINKLE, TWINKLE, WINTER NIGHT

Suitable for bedtime reading in any season, rich in both visual and sonic resonances.

A sky spangled with stars lights up snowy scenes in this celebration of winter holidays.

Casting her verses in the cadences of a familiar nursery rhyme, Litwin catalogs sources of illumination beginning with the stars—“In the quiet, calm, and clear— // sky sparkles like a chandelier.” She moves on from “quiet wood / to busy town,” the latter a village decked in festive strings and displays of lights, before finishing by sending readers “off to cozy beds to sleep.” In illustrations that are hazily aglow with natural and artificial lights, Myers follows suit by sending an adult and a child, both brown-skinned, on a walk through woods to a skating rink, then into a town square in which racially diverse residents can be seen chatting or singing carols, and on past a big hanging star and houses and stores lit with Kwanzaa candles, a menorah, a stylized Diwali lamp, and other seasonal symbols. At last, following a glimpse of two olive-skinned children leaving a plate of cookies next to their fireplace before bedding down, faces peering out of windows take final glances at the stars together. The snow and heavy dress indicate a setting in the Northern Hemisphere, but even if some of the imagery is oblique, at least an effort has been made to be inclusive without any prioritization or even mention of a specific holiday. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Suitable for bedtime reading in any season, rich in both visual and sonic resonances. (Picture book. 5-7)

Pub Date: Sept. 20, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-358-57204-6

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Clarion/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Aug. 16, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2022

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HOW TO CATCH A REINDEER

These reindeer games are a bit tired but, given the series’ popularity, should have a large, ready-made audience.

The How to Catch A… crew try for Comet.

Having already failed to nab a Halloween witch, the Easter Bunny, a turkey, a leprechaun, the Tooth Fairy, and over a dozen other iconic trophies in previous episodes of this bestselling series, one would think the racially diverse gaggle of children in Elkerton’s moonlit, wintry scenes would be flagging…but no, here they lay out snares ranging from a loop of garland to an igloo baited with reindeer moss to an enticing candy cane maze, all in hopes of snagging one of Santa’s reindeer while he’s busy delivering presents. Infused with pop culture–based Christmas cheer (“Now I’ve already seen the shelf with the elf”), Comet prances past the traps until it’s time to gather up the kids, most of whom look terrified, for a group snapshot with the other reindeer and then climb back into harness: “This was a great stop but a few million to go / Christmas Eve must continue with style!” Though festive, the verse feels trite and unlikely to entice youngsters. A sprinkling of “True Facts About Reindeer” (“They live in the tundra, where they have friends like the arctic bunny”) wrap up this celebration of the predatory spirit. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

These reindeer games are a bit tired but, given the series’ popularity, should have a large, ready-made audience. (Picture book. 5-7)

Pub Date: Oct. 4, 2022

ISBN: 9781728276137

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Sourcebooks Wonderland

Review Posted Online: Dec. 12, 2022

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LUNA AND THE WITCH THROW A HALLOWEEN PARTY

A high-spirited night free of frights.

Actor Plaza and writer/producer Murphy join forces for another bewitching picture book.

Halloween is always a dismal time for Pheenie the witch, because her parties are such failures—until the day spunky young Luna Lopez, who yearns to be a helpful bruja like her grandma in Puerto Rico, appears on her porch. The two strike a bargain: Pheenie will instruct Luna in spellcasting in return for Luna’s help planning and organizing a properly spook-tacular event. Luna helps Pheenie clean up the house and encourages her to substitute tasty cider for wormy trick-or-treat apples and to put out kid-friendly snacks like candy corn and cookies in place of the witch’s typical candied spiders and baked troll fingers. The effervescent narrative is further stoked by several rhymed spells and suitably energetic illustrations. Peck sets the tale in a racially diverse urban neighborhood, and as the witching hour approaches (at around eight p.m., according to the clock on the mantel), in troops a group of eager-looking young partygoers in upscale costumes to play hide-and-seek with real ghosts and dance to a goblin band. It’s a Halloween hullaballoo! Elderly Pheenie is pale-skinned; Luna is tan-skinned.

A high-spirited night free of frights. (Picture book. 5-7)

Pub Date: July 29, 2025

ISBN: 9780593693018

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Viking

Review Posted Online: May 3, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2025

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