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40 pp.
| Boyds
| April, 2017
|
TradeISBN 978-1-62979-303-0$16.95
(4)
K-3
After a flea family auditions and wins a spot in the acrobatic troupe The Fleatastics, young daughter Sarafleana, a "born jumper," itches to go solo. The book contains winning wordplay ("The greatest show on dogs!"; "grand fleanale") and applause-worthy artistic detail, but the layouts are so chaotic--there's running text, dialogue balloons, and micro-size asides--that it's hard to know what to read when.
(4)
K-3
Illustrated by
Matt Mahurin.
Different parents enumerate the many things they long to share with their children. The list includes such intimacies as "how soft a blanket can be" to the enormity of "how much I love you." Desimini's spare poetic text is paired with dramatic illustrations, which help make concrete the abstract concepts of the text. Even so, both art and text feel stiff and distant.
(3)
PS
Police partners Lou and Sue guide schoolchildren safely across the street, write a parking ticket, and apprehend a purse snatcher during their day. This friendly and informative look at the responsibilities of police officers will be a welcome addition to elementary classroom community-helper studies. Desimini's straightforward illustrations are just right for the clear, direct story.
(2)
PS
This is a bold, engaging outlet for preschoolers' perennial fascination with firefighters. Dalmatian Dot plays a central role in the firehouse and on an emergency call where the company successfully rescues an old man and his cat and puts out the fire. Throughout the story, both text and art highlight the details of greatest interest to children. The final page offers fire safety tips for adults and children to talk about together.
Reviewer: Lauren Adams
| Horn Book Magazine Issue:
November, 2001
32 pp.
| February, 1999
|
TradeISBN 0-590-18720-1$$16.95
(4)
K-3
A sun-loving boy giant and moony girl giant live their solitary lives on opposite ends of the planet, not realizing there is anyone else in the world as mammoth as themselves, until an eclipse brings them together. The story won't have a lot of child-appeal; however, the surreal mixed-media illustrations incorporate photographs to create arresting images, such as the boy sleeping on a tree-dotted plain, covered with a blanket of birds.