It's a foolish sheep that makes the wolf her confessor…thankfully, Mitzi is one smart lamb.
When she leaves to go to the meadow near her home to dance—a favorite pastime of hers—Mitzi doesn’t pay much attention to her parents’ rules about stranger danger. She knows she shouldn’t go alone, but her friends are busy, so she presses on. In the meadow, a sly, strange wolf lurks. When he approaches Mitzi and begins to pry, asking her name, trying to take her picture, and even asking for her phone number, she realizes she might be in trouble. While it’s too late to observe some of her parents’ rules, she follows the others and with some quick thinking, manages to get away to safety. The book uses humor to lighten the message-driven text, offering caregivers a safe, comfortable way to broach a tough subject with children. The digital illustrations are cute and expressive, especially the little woodland creatures in the background watching everything unfold. Bateman caps off the book with backmatter that educates young readers about digital citizenship and privacy.
A useful object lesson for teaching kids how to be smart about strangers.
(list of rules, glossary, memory game) (Picture book. 4-8)