Monday, October 17, 2022

Picture Book Review: Big Stuff: Planes, Rockets, Spacecraft by Joan Holub, illustrated by The Little Friends of Printmaking (10/19/2022)

Quick Booktalk 

Information about a variety of flying vehicles is introduced in an oversized board book format.


About the Illustration

The bold lines of the pictures, combined with the cartoonish faces assigned to the vehicles, are instantly engaging. Each spread includes a labeled diagram of the parts of a vehicle, a step by step description of how it works, and sections for Big History and a Big Fun Fact. Everything is accompanied with kid-friendly pictures. 


Readers Advisory

This would be too lengthy to read to a group, and it's also too long for my two-year-olds to sit through. For toddlers or story time audiences, I might just read aloud the rhyming couplets that introduce each vehicle and then add in additional information from other parts of the pages as the children express interest. For a four- or five-year-old, it would be fine to read all the details.


Content Notes

This is the perfect book for kids (especially little boys) who love things that go and want to hear all the details of how they work in a very child-friendly way. Because it's a board book, it's most appealing to ages 5 and under, but the content could skew even older.


Disclosure

I received a review copy of Big Stuff: Planes, Rockets, Spacecraft from Little Simon in exchange for an honest review. 

Monday, October 3, 2022

Picture Book Review: Mouse Calls by Anne Marie Pace, illustrated by Erin Kraan (10/5/2022)


Quick Booktalk 

With a big storm on the way, Mouse rushes to warn all of her animal friends and get them all to safety.

About the Illustrations 

I love the way the illustrator uses texture in this book. The way she draws the animals' fur, and their clothes, the grass and rocks, the leaves and even the rain makes it feel like the reader could reach out and touch them. The animals' wide expressive eyes, anthropomorphic behaviors and cute outfits contrubute to a gentle, cozy feeling. The blues and browns of the sky and background also help to evoke the damp, cool quality of air during a storm.

Read-Aloud Possiblities

The simple rhyming lines of this story make it a natural choice to read aloud, especially with toddlers. There is a good variety of animals in the text, too, including creatures not often mentioned in children's books, like the skink and the caribou. Occasional wordless spreads of the animals huddled away from the storm also give kids the opportunity to provide their own commentaries and interpretations of what is happening. This book would work nicely for a weather, animals, or mice theme. 

Readers Advisory 

The structure of the story reminds me a little bit of the Bear books by Karma Wilson (Bear Snores On, etc.) I also found myself thinking of The Umbrella by Jan Brett. 

Disclosure 

I received a review copy of Mouse Calls from Beach Lane Books in exchange for an honest review.

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