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HAVE YOU SEEN MY TRUMPET?

Who’s going to love it? Anyone with a keen eye and love of words.

The masters of picture-book wordplay have spawned a new challenge.

On the cover is a little brown-skinned child in a red-and-white–striped bathing suit, standing on the shore and evidently searching for something. Within, the child’s questions are parsed one by one to make visual puns connected by various animals and sea creatures. The picture that accompanies “Who is being selfish?” shows a crab in a tug of war over a bucket with a large fish wearing a T-shirt emblazoned “I [heart] ME.” “Who thinks it’s too crowded?” depicts a boat overflowing with many creatures, including a crow. In the spread asking “Who is at the wheel?” an eel is steering a boat flying a modified Jolly Roger (it has a fish skeleton on it). But what do these seaside scenes have to do with finding a trumpet? The child’s search is not for a musical instrument after all, despite the title, but a pet elephant! The animal names within each keyword are highlighted in red, and the clever illustrations play up the whimsy with details that embellish the fun. The third in this team’s trilogy of wordplay, this book joins Where’s the Baboon (2015) and Take Away the A (2014) to make a delightful, entertaining trilogy that is a salute to language creativity.

Who’s going to love it? Anyone with a keen eye and love of words. (Picture book. 5-8)

Pub Date: Sept. 27, 2016

ISBN: 978-1-59270-201-5

Page Count: 48

Publisher: Enchanted Lion Books

Review Posted Online: Aug. 1, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2016

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A BIKE LIKE SERGIO'S

Embedded in this heartwarming story of doing the right thing is a deft examination of the pressures of income inequality on...

Continuing from their acclaimed Those Shoes (2007), Boelts and Jones entwine conversations on money, motives, and morality.

This second collaboration between author and illustrator is set within an urban multicultural streetscape, where brown-skinned protagonist Ruben wishes for a bike like his friend Sergio’s. He wishes, but Ruben knows too well the pressure his family feels to prioritize the essentials. While Sergio buys a pack of football cards from Sonny’s Grocery, Ruben must buy the bread his mom wants. A familiar lady drops what Ruben believes to be a $1 bill, but picking it up, to his shock, he discovers $100! Is this Ruben’s chance to get himself the bike of his dreams? In a fateful twist, Ruben loses track of the C-note and is sent into a panic. After finally finding it nestled deep in a backpack pocket, he comes to a sense of moral clarity: “I remember how it was for me when that money that was hers—then mine—was gone.” When he returns the bill to her, the lady offers Ruben her blessing, leaving him with double-dipped emotions, “happy and mixed up, full and empty.” Readers will be pleased that there’s no reward for Ruben’s choice of integrity beyond the priceless love and warmth of a family’s care and pride.

Embedded in this heartwarming story of doing the right thing is a deft examination of the pressures of income inequality on children. (Picture book. 5-8)

Pub Date: Oct. 4, 2016

ISBN: 978-0-7636-6649-1

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Candlewick

Review Posted Online: July 19, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2016

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  • New York Times Bestseller


  • Caldecott Honor Book

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THEY ALL SAW A CAT

A solo debut for Wenzel showcasing both technical chops and a philosophical bent.

Awards & Accolades

Our Verdict

  • Our Verdict
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  • New York Times Bestseller


  • Caldecott Honor Book

Wouldn’t the same housecat look very different to a dog and a mouse, a bee and a flea, a fox, a goldfish, or a skunk?

The differences are certainly vast in Wenzel’s often melodramatic scenes. Benign and strokable beneath the hand of a light-skinned child (visible only from the waist down), the brindled cat is transformed to an ugly, skinny slinker in a suspicious dog’s view. In a fox’s eyes it looks like delectably chubby prey but looms, a terrifying monster, over a cowering mouse. It seems a field of colored dots to a bee; jagged vibrations to an earthworm; a hairy thicket to a flea. “Yes,” runs the terse commentary’s refrain, “they all saw the cat.” Words in italics and in capital letters in nearly every line give said commentary a deliberate cadence and pacing: “The cat walked through the world, / with its whiskers, ears, and paws… // and the fish saw A CAT.” Along with inviting more reflective viewers to ruminate about perception and subjectivity, the cat’s perambulations offer elemental visual delights in the art’s extreme and sudden shifts in color, texture, and mood from one page or page turn to the next.

A solo debut for Wenzel showcasing both technical chops and a philosophical bent. (Picture book. 6-8)

Pub Date: Aug. 30, 2016

ISBN: 978-1-4521-5013-0

Page Count: 44

Publisher: Chronicle Books

Review Posted Online: May 31, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2016

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