A reticent bear finds noisy social gatherings, well, "un-bear-able."
A swinging party is underway at Tiny the bunny’s house, but where is Tiny's ursine friend Bina? Is she that strangely large lamp with the shade on its head? Is she the lumpy table with ears and a tail? Is she the tree with the suspiciously bearlike trunk? The bear-shaped chair? The bookcase “bear-ing” the weight of all those books? What begins as a fun and risibly easy seek-and-find morphs into something more when Tiny sees beyond one of Bina’s less-convincing disguises (“I am not Bina. I am…groceries”) and asks her what’s wrong. Bina confesses that she does not like parties, but she does very much like Tiny. Moved, the bunny puts a little lampshade over its head—another humorously implausible camouflage—and the two friends dance together. Anyone who has ever eschewed the cacophony of raucous social events for a darkened bedroom will instantly relate to the bear’s emotional honesty. Curato’s simple ink, colored pencil, and watercolor illustrations help bring a gentle pathos to Bina’s predicament. Even the most outgoing child will learn to empathize with those that don’t have fun in crowds. Tiny’s gender is unspecified.
Imbued with understanding and overt silliness; a quietly chucklesome affirmation of introverts.
(Picture book. 3-6)