Self-awareness can sometimes help us avoid acting out our bad moods.
A big, grumpy black bear goes berserk at a carnival: popping a fox kit’s balloon, upsetting the face-painting booth, failing at line etiquette. Though a raccoon clown tries to divert him, Bear is having none of it. Briefly, a scent seems to draw him, until a hare magician’s attempt to corral him with a rope renews his ire. Then a trap baited with food snares him, spurring an apology, explanation, and tears. As in the creators' Bug on the Rug (2022), a last-minute mediator identifies the problem: Shrew understands what being “hangry” is like. Though Bear is offered a cupcake, we never see him eat, but he does help with cleanup and even makes friends. On the final pages, Shrew also becomes hangry but cheerfully explains the word’s meaning. The spare text moves briskly through a half-dozen rhyming sounds, though the unconventional typeface might confuse some beginning readers. The two-beat rhythm vanishes at times (“Others hide and howl, / as Bear snarls and scowls”), but the message is clear: Though this sort of behavior is unacceptable, it is understandable. The candy-colored, cartoonish illustrations include some unusual animals (a yak, an elk) among the fairgoers, and the creatures’ faces are all emotionally expressive.
Young readers will enjoy visiting this animal fair.
(Picture book. 4-8)