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SUNFLOWERS RISE IN A MIDNIGHT SKY

Eye filling and eclectic, this is an imagination-stirring bedtime treat for young children.

Davis leads readers on an odyssey through a fantasy dreamland in this children’s picture book.

“What if when night falls, dreams come true?” A combination of gorgeous artwork and narrative whimsy, this “what if” story is an invitation to imagine a sleepy-time world where purple cows eat purple grass, “airplanes land on marshmallow clouds,” Saturn’s rings fall in rainbow loops, and sidewalk squares tumble like dominos. It’s a place where mermaids, laughing hyenas, and spiders made of diamonds play, and an enormous lollipop disappears “in a billion licks.” The book features a series of vignettes with brief text serving as a design element in the exuberant, full-color illustrations by Wei, curving around images or set as short vertical, horizontal, or diagonal lines. The pattern of the author’s word pictures isn’t consistent, some expressed in rhyme and some in free verse, but the inventive theater-of-the-mind imagery is alternately soulful, humorous, and intriguing (“Words on signs rearrange to tell secrets”). The full-page watercolor, acrylic, and paper-and-fabric collage illustrations are rich with details to explore: A window curtain pulls back, revealing a night sky swirling with moths, stars, comets, seed pods, flowers, and a tiny black cat poised beside a miniature rainbow; and a graceful deer bends to drink from a river, belly glowing with “swallowed fireflies.”

Eye filling and eclectic, this is an imagination-stirring bedtime treat for young children.

Pub Date: Feb. 1, 2024

ISBN: 979-8218329204

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Empyrean Press

Review Posted Online: Feb. 5, 2024

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DRAGONS LOVE TACOS

From the Dragons Love Tacos series

A wandering effort, happy but pointless.

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The perfect book for kids who love dragons and mild tacos.

Rubin’s story starts with an incantatory edge: “Hey, kid! Did you know that dragons love tacos? They love beef tacos and chicken tacos. They love really big gigantic tacos and tiny little baby tacos as well.” The playing field is set: dragons, tacos. As a pairing, they are fairly silly, and when the kicker comes in—that dragons hate spicy salsa, which ignites their inner fireworks—the silliness is sillier still. Second nature, after all, is for dragons to blow flames out their noses. So when the kid throws a taco party for the dragons, it seems a weak device that the clearly labeled “totally mild” salsa comes with spicy jalapenos in the fine print, prompting the dragons to burn down the house, resulting in a barn-raising at which more tacos are served. Harmless, but if there is a parable hidden in the dragon-taco tale, it is hidden in the unlit deep, and as a measure of lunacy, bridled or unbridled, it doesn’t make the leap into the outer reaches of imagination. Salmieri’s artwork is fitting, with a crabbed, ethereal line work reminiscent of Peter Sís, but the story does not offer it enough range.

A wandering effort, happy but pointless. (Picture book. 3-5)

Pub Date: June 14, 2012

ISBN: 978-0-8037-3680-1

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Dial Books

Review Posted Online: March 27, 2012

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2012

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PERFECTLY NORMAN

From the Big Bright Feelings series

A heartwarming story about facing fears and acceptance.

A boy with wings learns to be himself and inspires others like him to soar, too.

Norman, a “perfectly normal” boy, never dreamed he might grow wings. Afraid of what his parents might say, he hides his new wings under a big, stuffy coat. Although the coat hides his wings from the world, Norman no longer finds joy in bathtime, playing at the park, swimming, or birthday parties. With the gentle encouragement of his parents, who see his sadness, Norman finds the courage to come out of hiding and soar. Percival (The Magic Looking Glass, 2017, etc.) depicts Norman with light skin and dark hair. Black-and-white illustrations show his father with dark skin and hair and his mother as white. The contrast of black-and-white illustrations with splashes of bright color complements the story’s theme. While Norman tries to be “normal,” the world and people around him look black and gray, but his coat stands out in yellow. Birds pop from the page in pink, green, and blue, emphasizing the joy and beauty of flying free. The final spread, full of bright color and multiracial children in flight, sets the mood for Norman’s realization on the last page that there is “no such thing as perfectly normal,” but he can be “perfectly Norman.”

A heartwarming story about facing fears and acceptance. (Picture book. 3-5)

Pub Date: May 1, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-68119-785-2

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Bloomsbury

Review Posted Online: March 3, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2018

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