Meet some cute offspring—and many humans’ favorite little animal: ourselves.
This delightful book nails rhymes and rhythms and features relatable content. Confidently employing a familiar two-beat-per-line quatrain, Larsen cleverly incorporates the proper terms for the young of a wide variety of animals. Porcupettes, peeps, puggles, codlings, crias, eyas, keets, poult, and pinkies will be new to many readers, while other words, such as goslings, tadpoles, calves, and kits may be more familiar. The colorful, cartoon-style illustrations are sharp, and the layout is packed but clear and unfussy. The size of the images and typeface is likely too small for group use but perfect for a lap—and there’s plenty to pore over. From the first page, where the wombat’s joeys are scaling a fluffy ewe while two lambs cavort on the wombat’s back, to a scene where a puffin parent looks concerned as a pair of pufflings fight over a tasty fish, to an image of a cygnet catching a lift on a colt’s back, there’s a lot to see. The refrain “everyone grows” is accompanied by developmental sequences showing creatures such as penguins, octopuses, and meerkats maturing. Toward the end, the focus shifts: “You once were a baby.” Additional animals look on, bemused, as “you” learn to roll, crawl, and walk. Humans depicted are tan- or brown-skinned. Many more unidentified animals (such as the uncommon axolotl), some with unlabeled young, are portrayed; reader research advised.
Bound to be a repeat-reading request.
(Informational picture book. 1-6)