by Steve Jenkins ; illustrated by Steve Jenkins ‧ RELEASE DATE: Feb. 23, 2021
Beautiful illustrations with finesse of color and detail make this worth visiting again and again.
A visual animal encyclopedia.
Caldecott honoree Jenkins lends his characteristic, detailed cut-paper illustrations to this lift-the-flap board book. Divided by climate (“arctic animals,” for instance), type (“airborne animals”), or habitat (“underground animals”), this picture-based guide presents the named animals in a series of simple grids. Each double-page spread features two flaps that, when opened, reveal more action than the surrounding illustrations. The flaps do a wonderful job of conveying motion, serving almost as before and after images. The trapdoor spider, for example, crawls out from belowground, and the penguin goes on a belly slide into the water. Jenkins plunges deeper into lesser-knowns of the animal kingdom than readers might typically find in a board book, a bonus for fans. There’s an oarfish, a tomato frog, and a darkling beetle, to name a few. As always, Jenkins’ illustrations invite readers to linger and look. The simple bee (a honeybee) looks as fuzzy as the real deal; the camel is furry, squinting with its signature suspicious eyes. Adult readers will get a chuckle out of some of the “indoor animals”: a moth, a termite, a cockroach, and a cricket, all of which might take some explaining to toddlers. Overall, this one will leave readers wishing for more of Jenkins’ rich illustrations, but it does succeed as a picture encyclopedia.
Beautiful illustrations with finesse of color and detail make this worth visiting again and again. (Novelty board book. 1-3)Pub Date: Feb. 23, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-358-10545-9
Page Count: 14
Publisher: HMH Books
Review Posted Online: May 4, 2021
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2021
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by Lori Alexander ; illustrated by Allison Black ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 17, 2019
A book about engineering notable mostly for its illustrations of diverse characters. (Board book. 1-3)
Babies and engineers have more in common than you think.
In this book, Alexander highlights the unlikely similarities between babies and engineers. Like engineers, babies ask questions, enjoy building, and learn from their mistakes. Black’s bold, colorful illustrations feature diverse babies and both male- and female-presenting adult characters with a variety of skin tones and hair colors, effectively demonstrating that engineers can be any race or either gender. (Nonbinary models are a little harder to see.) The story ends with a reassurance to the babies in the book that “We believe in you!” presumably implying that any child can be an engineer. The end pages include facts about different kinds of engineers and the basic process used by all engineers in their work. Although the book opens with a rhythmic rhyming couplet, the remaining text lacks the same structure and pattern, making it less entertaining to read. Furthermore, while some of the comparisons between babies and engineers are both clever and apt, others—such as the idea that babies know where to look for answers—are flimsier. The book ends with a text-heavy spread of facts about engineering that, bereft of illustrations, may not hold children’s attention as well as the previous pages. Despite these flaws, on its best pages, the book is visually stimulating, witty, and thoughtful.
A book about engineering notable mostly for its illustrations of diverse characters. (Board book. 1-3)Pub Date: Sept. 17, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-338-31223-2
Page Count: 24
Publisher: Cartwheel/Scholastic
Review Posted Online: June 22, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2019
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by Kate Riggs ; illustrated by Laetitia Devernay ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 13, 2018
Don’t judge this book by its cover; there’s an unusual concept and whimsical illustrations hiding underneath
A series of solid shapes substitute for natural objects in this board book that is somewhere between concept book and riddle game.
What’s that shape supposed to be? Running across a rust-brown labeled triangle, amid trees and elk, the text “Climb a TRIANGLE to the top” suggests the shape is a mountain; in an ocean scene with a red “STAR washed in on the waves,” the shape implies a sea star. Ample visual cues give young readers enough context to guess what the shape evokes, with some unexpected touches, such as “HEXAGON” printed on hexagonal honeycombs buzzing with bees and surrounded by golden flowers. Short, commanding sentences keep things humming, but with only six shapes covered, the book feels all too brief. Illustrator Devernay combines delicate pencil line drawings and sketchy gray-black shading with tiny, meticulously cut colored-paper collage to create her plants and animals. The most intimate drawings amaze. Close-ups of smooth stones are so appealing that readers will long to pick one up and “rub a smooth OVAL between thumb and finger.” Sadly, the cover doesn’t do the interior justice, and things get murky when several hues mix there and on the final spread. But on other spreads, where there’s a single color, it pops against the gray, such as the minute yellow beaks on the flock of charcoal birds circling the yellow “CIRCLE” sun.
Don’t judge this book by its cover; there’s an unusual concept and whimsical illustrations hiding underneath . (Board book. 1-3)Pub Date: March 13, 2018
ISBN: 978-1-56846-317-9
Page Count: 14
Publisher: Creative Editions/Creative Company
Review Posted Online: March 3, 2018
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2018
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