A little car’s fears are put to the ultimate test.
A bevy of beautiful new anthropomorphic cars eagerly board their respective transport trucks. But not Axle. He’s afraid. No-nonsense Earlene, Axle’s transport truck, manages to get him to the car dealership with everyone else, but next thing you know, he’s cowering on top of her, begging to go back to the factory. Undeterred, Earlene takes Axle into the flatlands, foothills, and mountains, where he gains confidence in his motoring skills. And when Earlene experiences a flat on the way back, Axle now has the courage to find help. While the book attempts to promote self-confidence, this message is muddled in its delivery. Just what is the book trying to say about fear? Axle’s are never named—Earlene just assumes he needs “practice” on the road—which makes conquering them all the more complicated. And while Earlene’s training montage is nice, is the book implying that a skill must be mastered before trying anything new? Later, when Axle smells “burning” late in the book, Earlene’s tire may be the reason, but this fact is never explained to young readers. Accompanying art is consistently colorful and upbeat if unimaginatively Cars-like, but it too indulges in oddities, like giving the top car at the assembly line a superfluous, luxurious mustache. (This book was reviewed digitally with 10-by-16-inch double-page spreads viewed at 48% of actual size.)
Cars and trucks and things don’t go so well here.
(Picture book. 3-6)