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EMERGENCY VEHICLES

A pleaser for fans of big rigs and disaster scenarios alike.

An international gallery of air, sea, and land firefighting and rescue vehicles, with hinged flaps offering peeks inside each.

Drawn with Biesty’s trademark attention to fine detail and printed on stiff cardboard, the eight featured vehicles include an Australian police car festooned with cameras and other high-tech gear, a NATO submarine rescue pod, a big New York City fireboat, and a British Tamar-class motorized lifeboat. Explanatory labels and small views of the vehicle in action or of other makes with similar jobs surround the large central image. Though the artist apparently can’t resist adding an occasional cutaway view, the flaps are designed to be almost invisible at first glance so that viewers can get a sense of what each vehicle actually looks like before they start delving into insides and distinctive gear. The labeling is sometimes perfunctory—the contents of a helicopter ambulance’s baggage compartment are generically dubbed “Emergency equipment,” and a ground-based ambulance features “privacy windows,” whatever that means—but overall the text adds informative notes about specialized features, life-saving capabilities, power plants, top speeds, and other performance data.

A pleaser for fans of big rigs and disaster scenarios alike. (Informational novelty. 5-7)

Pub Date: June 14, 2015

ISBN: 978-0-7636-7959-0

Page Count: 16

Publisher: Templar/Candlewick

Review Posted Online: May 17, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2015

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THAT'S HOW!

Bold, brightly colored graphics, big, brushed letters and patent silliness catch the eye but perhaps not the imagination. A little girl asks a little boy, “How does a truck work?” The boy says, “Let me think,” as they both regard a shiny red panel truck. On the next page, a silhouette cutaway of the truck is shown, with a supine lion turning the gears with his toes. “That’s how!” he says. The girl responds, “Wow!” And so it goes. The girl asks a question, the boy thinks about it, the visual shows some very odd animals providing the engine for a pink airplane (birds with fuchsia feet), a steamroller (a parrot tickling some highly amused bears), a train (a kitchen full of monkeys). Finally, the girl asks about a bicycle, but before he can answer, she climbs aboard, puts on her helmet and rides off. “Wow!” he says. Ink drawings and digital shapes make for a smooth, cartoony surface. It all feels sexist and gender-divisive, even though the girl makes the final—correct—point. Young readers might admire the boy’s powers of invention (the pink bunny manipulating the green lizard inside the backhoe is really quite something), but they might also wonder both why he pontificates so and why she bothers to ask. A nifty concept doesn't quite make it in execution. (Picture book. 5-7)

Pub Date: May 1, 2011

ISBN: 978-0-06-201963-9

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Greenwillow Books

Review Posted Online: April 4, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2011

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CAR GOES FAR

From the I Like To Read series

An inviting, accessible title for new readers.

Garland’s little red car invites children along for a ride to reading success.

Opening endpapers show an aerial view of a Levittown-like setting with a single driveway occupied by a car. The title page zooms in on this home, with the car facing the reader, its headlights like eyes and its fender a subtle smile. That expression is amplified in the closer view on the first page of the book proper, with the simple text “Car looks good.” But when the car ventures out to “go far,” it ends up becoming quite a mess after mud, smoke, and birds sully its shiny, red body. “Car does not look good now,” reads the controlled text. “Car is sad.” Happily, Car is also resourceful and heads off to a carwash. Simple lines—“Car gets wet. Splash, splash. / Car gets suds. // Car gets a rub. Mmmmmmm”—see it getting clean again. Closing endpapers picture the car driving back through the suburban neighborhood again, its bright yellow headlights echoing the lights in the houses. Digital illustrations may make some children think of Pixar’s Cars films, particularly in scenes where Car’s facial expressions are strongest and most humorous—as when the birds make their mess.

An inviting, accessible title for new readers. (Early reader. 5-7)

Pub Date: April 1, 2013

ISBN: 978-0-8234-2598-3

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Holiday House

Review Posted Online: Feb. 17, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2013

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