A love poem, told in dialogue.
“My love for you would fill 10 pots / 15 buckets and 16 cans / 3 teacups and 4 cakepans,” a gray cat informs a brown dog while ladling hot chocolate into the enumerated vessels. The sweet image and statement allude to the unquantifiable nature of love. Earnest pencil and digitally drawn art looks like it could be placed on a refrigerator alongside well-loved handmade notes and drawings. The anthropomorphic animals’ attachment to each other is without label, making for an inclusive tale that just about any caregiver could easily share with little ones at bedtime. At one point, the cat states, “I love you up,” while the dog, suspended in the air while flying a kite, responds, “I love you down / My love for you / can touch the ground”—a page that makes effective use of perspective and movement. Wood and Karas also root the poem in the tangible as the characters reference the rainbow and trains to express their love. There are no bumps in the road here, and some may find the lack of narrative or drama unfulfilling, but most will fall into the declarations heart-first. Fans of Salina Yoon’s Penguin and Pinecone (2012) or Kathryn Cristaldi’s I’ll Love You Till the Cows Come Home (2018), illustrated by Kristyna Litten, will find new companions in these pages. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
There’s a lot of love here, and it’s all good.
(Picture book. 3-5)