by Tricia Torrible ; illustrated by Robert Dunn ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 18, 2025
Heaping helpings of clever wordplay, for better or verse.
Three dozen delights for fans of puns and wordplay.
“Once I stayed awake all night / and wondered what I’d see. / I sat and pondered in the dark / until it dawned on me.” Demonstrating firm command of exact rhymes and rollicking metrics, Torrible’s debut features a set of pungently sharp-witted lyrics. Language lovers who can control their giggles well enough to read on will learn that clocks were not allowed in the library because “they tocked too loud,” meet a circus pony who admits to being “a little hoarse,” discover why leopards are so bad at hide and seek (“They’re always spotted”), and sympathize with a job seeker who “loathed serving coffee despite all the perks. / He dreaded the slow daily grind.” “Have your morning bowl of coal,” a mother train urges her wheeled offspring, “and don’t forget to choo.” Dunn’s breezy images of animals, emblematic items, and light-skinned young folk add gleeful visual notes to the relentless punnery. For any who still don’t get the jokes even after the poems are read aloud (which they beg to be), the author has appended a stolidly literal breakdown of each one at the very end, capped by an invitation to budding punsters to chime in. “Shredded cheddar / melts with ease. / Get your own. / It’s nacho cheese!”
Heaping helpings of clever wordplay, for better or verse. (Picture-book poetry. 6-10)Pub Date: March 18, 2025
ISBN: 9781957655468
Page Count: 40
Publisher: Gnome Road Publishing
Review Posted Online: Oct. 25, 2024
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2024
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by Neil Gaiman ; illustrated by Various ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 31, 2023
No substitute for blankets or shelter, but perhaps a way of securing some warmth for those in need.
Gaiman’s free-verse meditation on coming in from, or at least temporarily fending off, the cold is accompanied by artwork from 13 illustrators.
An ambassador for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, the author put out a social media appeal in 2019 asking people about their memories of warmth; the result is this picture book, whose proceeds will go to the UNHCR. For many refugees and other displaced persons, Gaiman writes, “food and friends, / home, a bed, even a blanket, / become just memories.” Here he gathers images that signify warmth, from waking in a bed “burrowed beneath blankets / and comforters” to simply holding a baked potato or being offered a scarf. Using palettes limited to black and the warm orange in which most of the text is printed, an international slate of illustrators give these images visual form, and 12 of the 13 add comments about their intentions or responses. The war in Ukraine is on the minds of Pam Smy and Bagram Ibatoulline, while Majid Adin recalls his time as a refugee in France’s “Calais jungle” camp. “You have the right to be here,” the poet concludes, which may give some comfort to those facing the cold winds of public opinion in too many of the places where refugees fetch up. The characters depicted are diverse. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
No substitute for blankets or shelter, but perhaps a way of securing some warmth for those in need. (Picture book. 6-9)Pub Date: Oct. 31, 2023
ISBN: 9780063358089
Page Count: 32
Publisher: Quill Tree Books/HarperCollins
Review Posted Online: July 26, 2023
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2023
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by Ada Limón ; illustrated by Peter Sís ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 1, 2024
A luminous call to think about what is and to envision what might be.
In U.S. Poet Laureate Limón’s debut picture book, soaring images and lyrics invite contemplation of life’s wonders—on Earth and perhaps, tantalizingly, elsewhere.
“O second moon,” writes Limón, “we, too, are made / of water, // of vast and beckoning seas.” In visual responses to a poem that will be carried by NASA’s Europa Clipper, a probe scheduled for launch in October 2024 and designed to check Jupiter’s ice-covered ocean moon for possible signs of life, Sís offers flowing glimpses of earthly birds and whales, of heavenly bodies lit with benevolent smiles, and a small light-skinned space traveler flying between worlds in a vessel held aloft by a giant book. Following the undulations of the poet’s cadence, falling raindrops give way to shimmering splashes, then to a climactic fiery vision reminiscent of Vincent van Gogh’s Starry Night before finishing with mirrored human figures made of stars. Visual images evocative of the tree of life presage what Límon writes in her afterword: that her poem is as much about “our own precious planet” as it is about what may lie in wait for us to discover on others. “We, too, are made of wonders, of great / and ordinary loves, // of small invisible worlds, // of a need to call out through the dark.”
A luminous call to think about what is and to envision what might be. (Picture book. 7-10)Pub Date: Oct. 1, 2024
ISBN: 9781324054009
Page Count: 32
Publisher: Norton Young Readers
Review Posted Online: July 4, 2024
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2024
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