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COOKIE QUEEN

HOW ONE GIRL STARTED TATE'S BAKE SHOP®

Had this tale been subjected to as much testing as the titular cookies, how much tastier it could have been.

King, who in 2000 founded Tate’s Bake Shop, offers halcyon reminiscences about her earliest entrepreneurial days.

Kathleen may only be 11, but she’s responsible for much of the family’s cooking and baking. She strikes up a deal with her dad, Tate: In exchange for baking and selling cookies at the family’s farm stand this summer, she can use the money on new clothes. So Kathleen sets out to create the best chocolate chip cookies, using trial and error not only to tweak her recipes, but also to find a way to outsell the competition. A note at the end explains how early experience led to her company (named after her dad); also included is a recipe, not for chocolate chip cookies but molasses ones. This story doesn’t know what it wants to be. Is it a guide to finding gaps in the market and innovating or a memoir of self-discovery? Stilted dialogue feels straight out of a business book for kids. “How are Kathleen’s cookies today?” “Great….But how do I make them so they’re the only cookies people want to buy?” Confusion extends to the illustrations, where 11-year-old Kathleen is depicted as particularly young and where perspective is at times askew. Kathleen and Tate both present White in the artwork. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Had this tale been subjected to as much testing as the titular cookies, how much tastier it could have been. (Informational picture book. 4-7)

Pub Date: July 25, 2023

ISBN: 9780593485668

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Random House

Review Posted Online: May 9, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2023

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ROSA PARKS

From the Little People, BIG DREAMS series

It’s a bit sketchy of historical detail, but it’s coherent, inspirational, and engaging without indulging in rapturous...

A first introduction to the iconic civil rights activist.

“She was very little and very brave, and she always tried to do what was right.” Without many names or any dates, Kaiser traces Parks’ life and career from childhood to later fights for “fair schools, jobs, and houses for black people” as well as “voting rights, women’s rights and the rights of people in prison.” Though her refusal to change seats and the ensuing bus boycott are misleadingly presented as spontaneous acts of protest, young readers will come away with a clear picture of her worth as a role model. Though recognizable thanks to the large wire-rimmed glasses Parks sports from the outset as she marches confidently through Antelo’s stylized illustrations, she looks childlike throughout (as characteristic of this series), and her skin is unrealistically darkened to match the most common shade visible on other African-American figures. In her co-published Emmeline Pankhurst (illustrated by Ana Sanfelippo), Kaiser likewise simplistically implies that Great Britain led the way in granting universal women’s suffrage but highlights her subject’s courageous quest for justice, and Isabel Sánchez Vegara caps her profile of Audrey Hepburn (illustrated by Amaia Arrazola) with the moot but laudable claim that “helping people across the globe” (all of whom in the pictures are dark-skinned children) made Hepburn “happier than acting or dancing ever had.” All three titles end with photographs and timelines over more-detailed recaps plus at least one lead to further information.

It’s a bit sketchy of historical detail, but it’s coherent, inspirational, and engaging without indulging in rapturous flights of hyperbole. (Picture book/biography. 5-7)

Pub Date: Sept. 7, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-78603-018-4

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Frances Lincoln

Review Posted Online: May 9, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2017

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REACH HIGHER

AN INSPIRING PHOTO CELEBRATION OF FIRST LADY MICHELLE OBAMA

With Souza’s book, this could have bookended the Obama years. But it’s more of a bookend and a paperweight.

Lucidon’s adaptation of her adult book Chasing Light (2017) for the kindergarten-to–second-grade set aims for the photographic splendor of Pete Souza’s Dream Big Dreams (2017), which celebrates what made the Obama administration both historic and extraordinary.

The author gives context for the first lady’s roles as well as the role of a White House photographer and the White House itself, including descriptions of the storied hued rooms. Within that framework, Lucidon shows Michelle Obama performing her duties inside and outside what she called “the People’s House.” However, it’s arguable that enough books exist detailing the duties and the building. What readers likely want from this book is to understand what exactly made Obama’s tenure as incredible as her husband’s. For example, the author calls Obama “Visitor-in-Chief,” but she most famously called herself “Mom-in-Chief” and validated many black mothers in a national discourse that constantly denigrates them. Considering this, it’s regrettable that the book includes relatively few photos of Obama with her family. Other missed opportunities abound, as when Lucidon fails to explain why black girls dancing under Lincoln’s portrait is significant in light of Obama’s first ladyship even as she acknowledges it is “a special moment in history.”

With Souza’s book, this could have bookended the Obama years. But it’s more of a bookend and a paperweight. (Nonfiction. 4-7)

Pub Date: Oct. 23, 2018

ISBN: 978-0-525-64400-2

Page Count: 112

Publisher: Crown

Review Posted Online: Sept. 16, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 2018

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