Kirkus Reviews QR Code
THE BABY-CHANGING STATION by Rhett Miller

THE BABY-CHANGING STATION

by Rhett Miller ; illustrated by Dan Santat

Pub Date: Aug. 2nd, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-316-45932-7
Publisher: Little, Brown

What if the baby-changing station in the men’s room could change a baby brother into something much cooler?

James—a 10-year-old with large brown eyes and a mop of green-tinted, dark hair—immediately catches readers’ attention by saying he has done something he feels badly about. No, James hasn’t actually done anything wrong, but he feels guilty about his jealousy of his new little brother and his thoughts of returning the infant through the U.S. mail. When baby Joe poops just as the family begins a meal at their favorite pizza house, the hungry, exhausted parents assign James his first “diaper duty.” Adults may bristle at this unexpected burden on James, but the funny art makes the task seem less onerous. Before leaving the men’s room, James is tempted by a mysterious screen that offers him the opportunity to exchange the infant for night-vision specs, electric guitars, or a chemistry set and promises to erase all family memories of the baby. James gains insight as he considers and rejects each offer; the baby’s final reaction provides warmhearted closure. The AABCCB rhyme pattern generally works; words such as subsequent, nemesis, and contention are clear from context. The family is tan-skinned. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Hilarious potty humor—with a purpose.

(Picture book. 4-8)