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THEO THESAURUS by Shelli R. Johannes

THEO THESAURUS

The Dinosaur Who Loved Big Words

by Shelli R. Johannes ; illustrated by Mike Moran

Pub Date: May 18th, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-593-20551-8
Publisher: Philomel

A young TheSaurus experiences difficulty communicating with his new fellow pupils following a move.

The first few days at his new school leave Theo feeling discommoded, as his friendly salutations, offers to share crudités at midday repast, and commence a game of “conceal-and-search” on the playground are met with mute incomprehension. Not even a general invitation to his hatching-day festivities seems to ignite much enthusiasm, as party time comes and goes with nary a sign of guests. Plainly feeling that a happy ending obviates the need for internal logic, Johannes has Theo’s parents comfort him with a hug—whereupon the doorbell rings and the inexplicably tardy classmates troop in. Moran doesn’t rise to the challenge of the text, kitting Theo out with a bow tie (because big vocabulary = nerd, right?) and leaving not just time (which might have made sense of the ending) but day and place as well off the party invitation Theo writes on the class chalkboard. Younger logophiles may savor the wordplay and appreciate the “Defino-Dino” who occasionally pops into view with a helpful definition (“Conceal-and-search,” it explains, “is another way of saying hide-and-seek”). Readers will find richer digging in, say, Douglas Florian’s Dinothesaurus (2009) or Anya Glazer’s Thesaurus Has a Secret (2020). (This book was reviewed digitally with 10-by-20-inch double-page spreads viewed at 75% of actual size.)

A pleasant but, at best, superficial bit of sesquipedalian gallimaufry.

(glossary) (Picture book. 6-8)