by Susan Musgrave ; illustrated by Marilyn Faucher ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 26, 2019
If your love is sweet like honey, share this with a child your love is for.
A poetic ode to the love a parent feels for a child—love that is “pure,” “tender,” “sweet,” “fierce,” “strong,” and “endless.”
These rather abstract terms are explained using similes drawn from nature. Each stanza opens with two lines that begin with “Like.” Further figurative language is embedded in each stanza. Loose watercolor-and-gouache pictures pair the words with idealized visions of the natural world. Only three illustrations include people, all with light skin. Even though the seasons are not named, the verses and pictures evoke them, with spring: “Like blossoms kissing your eyes in sunlight, / a soft breeze misting your cheeks with dew, // like snowdrops bowing their heads to no one, / that’s how pure my love is.” In summer, love is “like blackberries big as your thumbs, and juicy, / and honey from bees who go bizz-buzz-whizz”; in fall it is “like mother bear cuddling her cubs in her den”; and finally in winter it’s “like mountains heaving under drifts of snow.” The final stanza invites the child to “count the stars on a night clear anew, / that’s how endless my love is for you.” The rather sophisticated phrasing and obscure comparisons may leave very young children puzzled. But the message of unconditional parental love cannot be missed even if toddlers don’t understand all the language.
If your love is sweet like honey, share this with a child your love is for. (Board book. 2-4)Pub Date: March 26, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-4598-1846-0
Page Count: 24
Publisher: Orca
Review Posted Online: April 27, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2019
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by Christopher Silas Neal ; illustrated by Christopher Silas Neal ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 27, 2018
Innovative and thoroughly enjoyable.
You think you know shapes? Animals? Blend them together, and you might see them both a little differently!
What a mischievous twist on a concept book! With wordplay and a few groan-inducing puns, Neal creates connections among animals and shapes that are both unexpected and so seemingly obvious that readers might wonder why they didn’t see them all along. Of course, a “lazy turtle” meeting an oval would create the side-splitting combo of a “SLOW-VAL.” A dramatic page turn transforms a deeply saturated, clean-lined green oval by superimposing a head and turtle shell atop, with watery blue ripples completing the illusion. Minimal backgrounds and sketchy, impressionistic detailing keep the focus right on the zany animals. Beginning with simple shapes, the geometric forms become more complicated as the book advances, taking readers from a “soaring bird” that meets a triangle to become a “FLY-ANGLE” to a “sleepy lion” nonagon “YAWN-AGON.” Its companion text, Animal Colors, delves into color theory, this time creating entirely hybrid animals, such as the “GREEN WHION” with maned head and whale’s tail made from a “blue whale and a yellow lion.” It’s a compelling way to visualize color mixing, and like Animal Shapes, it’s got verve. Who doesn’t want to shout out that a yellow kangaroo/green moose blend is a “CHARTREUSE KANGAMOOSE”?
Innovative and thoroughly enjoyable. (Board book. 2-4)Pub Date: March 27, 2018
ISBN: 978-1-4998-0534-5
Page Count: 40
Publisher: Little Bee Books
Review Posted Online: May 13, 2018
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2018
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by Joan Holub ; illustrated by Chris Dickason ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 22, 2019
Good for a giggle from preschool readers despite its slight imperfections.
A brightly illustrated story told in rhyme about mixed-up robots getting ready for the day.
Holub and Dickason team up for another title echoing the style of their similarly formatted Hello Knights! and Hello Ninjas! (both 2018). Here, the titular robots are having trouble getting ready for the day. They put socks on top of shoes and even forget how to eat their cereal, pouring milk on their heads and flipping their bowls upside down on the table. The confusion comes to a climax in a double gatefold in which the robots realize that they need a reboot, correcting their routines. Young readers will delight in the silliness: underpants on heads, bathing in clothes. Holub’s rhyming text works well for the most part and includes some charming turns of phrase, such as “brushing bolts” in place of brushing teeth. Dickason’s illustrations use a consistent palette of mostly primary colors and feature 1960s-style robots drawn with antennae, motherboards on boxy chests, and wheels for feet. The pages are busy and packed, allowing for new discoveries upon each read, though this busyness argues for use with older toddlers. It’s not entirely clear where the robots are headed (school?) or whether or not they’re also ETs (they fly away on a spaceship), but the story is fun enough to overlook those muddled details.
Good for a giggle from preschool readers despite its slight imperfections. (Board book. 2-4)Pub Date: Jan. 22, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-5344-1871-4
Page Count: 26
Publisher: Little Simon/Simon & Schuster
Review Posted Online: March 2, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2019
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