A spaceman lands on planet Earth.
This story ticks all the boxes. Clever narrative that humorously mimics 19th-century travelogues, check. Engaging illustrations that enrich and amplify, check. Endearing characters, double-check. Our unnamed, goggle-eyed, yellow-skinned, tiny hero tells readers that it’s his job to visit planets. He collects soil samples, he labels them, and he files them. Then it’s off to the next planet. And the next. But on this planet, which at first seems as desolate as the rest, the spaceman is entranced by a gorgeous—and comparatively huge—flower. While he’s gazing at it, his spacecraft is stolen by a “thief that sprouted wings from its feathery sides” (a bird). He chases, but to no avail. Then he’s accosted by a “hideous beast, all covered in fur” (an adorable dog). He flees. Sitting on a rock, he’s about to yell in frustration when he notices the night is ending, and in the daylight, the planet’s rich and varied beauty is revealed. He hitches a ride with a butterfly, enthralled by all he sees, then loses his grip and falls into a lily pond, where the “hideous beast” rescues him (the creature is “not without its charms,” the spaceman admits). As the spaceman and the dog snuggle together on dry land, he looks up—and sees his spacecraft in the branches of a tree. Ah, he can return to his old life again. But will he?
Humorous, poignant, and oh-so-satisfying.
(Picture book. 3-7)