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CITY BEET

Community gardeners everywhere will want to “rise” to the challenge.

How big is “big”? An entire community is about to find out.

Victoria, who is brown-skinned, and her friend Mrs. Kosta, who is light-skinned, decide to bring a beet salad to the potluck block party in July—but first they have to grow the beet. They plant the seed and tend their garden for months until summer reveals an enormous surprise. The beet is gigantic! A parade of community helpers joins in to tug that recalcitrant veggie out of the ground, to no avail. No matter how many times Victoria offers to help, she’s pooh-poohed for her small size. Instead, as everyone is groaning and moaning, the child prepares the fixings for the beet salad. Meanwhile, the line of neighbors is getting longer and longer until they block the bus lane. “But that big red beet wouldn’t budge. Not even ONE LITTLE BIT.” The enterprising child takes matters into her own hands. With the help of a jump-rope and a trike, Victoria adds that right amount of oomph to yank that red beet right out—just in time for the potluck. Cohen’s modern, urban take on the Russian folktale “The Enormous Turnip” unites a diverse neighborhood for a comically common cause. The jaunty refrain is fun to recite after each failed attempt. Lugo’s colorfully detailed illustrations add to the humorous enterprise. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Community gardeners everywhere will want to “rise” to the challenge. (author’s note, recipe for raw beet & garlic salad) (Picture book. 4-7)

Pub Date: March 14, 2023

ISBN: 9781534112711

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Sleeping Bear Press

Review Posted Online: Jan. 11, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2023

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PIRATES DON'T TAKE BATHS

Echoes of Runaway Bunny color this exchange between a bath-averse piglet and his patient mother. Using a strategy that would probably be a nonstarter in real life, the mother deflects her stubborn offspring’s string of bath-free occupational conceits with appeals to reason: “Pirates NEVER EVER take baths!” “Pirates don’t get seasick either. But you do.” “Yeesh. I’m an astronaut, okay?” “Well, it is hard to bathe in zero gravity. It’s hard to poop and pee in zero gravity too!” And so on, until Mom’s enticing promise of treasure in the deep sea persuades her little Treasure Hunter to take a dive. Chunky figures surrounded by lots of bright white space in Segal’s minimally detailed watercolors keep the visuals as simple as the plotline. The language isn’t quite as basic, though, and as it rendered entirely in dialogue—Mother Pig’s lines are italicized—adult readers will have to work hard at their vocal characterizations for it to make any sense. Moreover, younger audiences (any audiences, come to that) may wonder what the piggy’s watery closing “EUREKA!!!” is all about too. Not particularly persuasive, but this might coax a few young porkers to get their trotters into the tub. (Picture book. 4-6)

Pub Date: March 1, 2011

ISBN: 978-0-399-25425-3

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Philomel

Review Posted Online: Jan. 25, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2011

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ASTRONAUT HAYLEY'S BRAVE ADVENTURE

Sweet but misleading.

A plucky child becomes a space traveler.

Arceneaux was the first pediatric cancer survivor and the first with a prosthetic body part to become an astronaut, part of the first all-civilian space mission in 2021. The author, who in 2022 published the adult memoir Wild Ride and its 2023 adaptation for middle-grade readers, here shares her story with an even younger audience. Told in the third person, the narrative emphasizes the bravery she summoned as she coped with a cancer that left her with a prosthetic leg bone and knee (hinted at with an incision line in one illustration) and went on to become a space traveler. Curiously, Hayley and her astronaut colleagues are portrayed as children. They play with a “stuffed toy alien,” and in an imagined episode, Hayley ventures outside the spacecraft to perform a repair. Accompanied by softly hued illustrations with character designs that recall Precious Moments figurines, the narrative emphasizes familiar details of space travel that will appeal to children; both their bodies and their food float in zero gravity. The mission splashes down safely, and Hayley rushes to hug her mom. Though Arceneaux was the youngest astronaut to have orbited the Earth, she was an adult when she did so. The odd choice to depict her as a child reduces her compelling story to a fantasy. Arceneaux is white; other characters are diverse.

Sweet but misleading. (Picture book. 4-7)

Pub Date: Feb. 18, 2025

ISBN: 9780593443903

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Convergent

Review Posted Online: Nov. 9, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2024

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