As a digital subscriber, you’ll receive unlimited access to Horn Book web exclusives and extensive archives, as well as access to our highly searchable Guide/Reviews Database.
To access other site content, visit The Horn Book homepage.
To continue you need an active subscription to hbook.com.
Subscribe now to gain immediate access to everything hbook.com has to offer, as well as our highly searchable Guide/Reviews Database, which contains tens of thousands of short, critical reviews of books published in the United States for young people.
Thank you for registering. To have the latest stories delivered to your inbox, select as many free newsletters as you like below.
No thanks. Return to article
32 pp.
| Harcourt
| May, 2009
|
TradeISBN 978-0-15-205177-8$16.00
(3)
K-3
A little girl and a stray dog, unaware of each other, find themselves simultaneously thinking forlorn thoughts as they witness various dog-owner combos at a park. Their loneliness is so palpable that readers will be rooting for them to find each other (they do). Gouache illustrations in Radunsky's recognizable style set against tan handmade-paper backdrops are emotive.
32 pp.
| Viking
| September, 2002
|
TradeISBN 0-670-03563-7$$16.99
(3)
K-3
In a breezy, make-it-up-as-he-goes-along tone, Radunsky introduces readers to a happy armadillo couple whose joy is compounded by the birth of their ten children, named One, Two, Three, etc. The free-spirited page design, featuring blocky collage art in electric colors, enhances the whimsical nature of the text.
32 pp.
| Atheneum/Schwartz
| September, 2002
|
TradeISBN 0-689-83193-5$$15.95
(2)
K-3
Radunsky constructs an allegory around Brussels's Manneken Pis, the bronze statue of a little boy merrily piddling a fountain. In this version, the town is being consumed by war. The boy pees off the top of a building onto the combatants below; they all begin "laughing, laughing, laughing" and put down their arms. The battle scenes in the boldly theatrical paintings are only mock-ferocious, the "enemies" depicted with cute little green faces.
Reviewer: Roger Sutton
| Horn Book Magazine Issue:
September, 2002
32 pp.
| Candlewick
| November, 2001
|
TradeISBN 0-7636-1453-X$$16.99
(4)
K-3
The authors/artists serve up an irreverent and humorous guide that would surely displease Martha Stewart. Proper Chester instructs a manners-impaired Dudunya in the basics as well as some more obscure skills (napkin folding for the Queen). The mixed-media art and variety of type sizes contribute to a frantic design, but this determindly offbeat effort will appeal to those with a loose approach to etiquette.
34 pp.
| Scholastic
| January, 1998
|
TradeISBN 0-590-09837-3
(4)
K-3
Glossy expanses of intense color provide the backdrop on which collage illustrations enact a tongue twister about three nonsensically named brothers who marry three equally outlandish sisters. The graphics are dramatic and unusual, in part because they show the merging of two interracial families, but the tongue twister proves too slight to sustain an entire book.