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BABY NARWHAL by Yu-Hsuan Huang

BABY NARWHAL

Finger Puppet Book

illustrated by Yu-Hsuan Huang

Pub Date: March 2nd, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-7972-0565-6
Publisher: Chronicle Books

A narwhal finger puppet accompanies related facts in this compact board book.

Similar to predecessor Baby Raccoon (2020), this small and chunky board book offers different toddler-appropriate factoids about its subject, providing exposure to relevant words such as tusk. Little listeners might be surprised to learn that narwhals communicate by clicking and how they hold their breath “for a long time!” Keeping the book short with a simple sentence or two on each page maintains a swift and age-appropriate pace. The finger puppet itself is a cute gimmick, designed more for an adult’s finger than a child’s given the thickness of the book. Aside from having a tusk, the finger puppet doesn’t resemble a real narwhal. Its light blue body and sparkly purple tusk make it more akin to a unicorn than a whale (capitalizing on unicorn popularity, perhaps). This stands in contrast to the book’s otherwise informative, nonfiction tone. The accompanying illustrations are simple, extending a painted body for the protagonist from the puppet on each spread and endowing all the normal characters with googly eyes and smiles. But while this is a nice, informational text for a younger audience with a high-interest animal as its subject, the finger puppet adds little.

It gets credit for the nonfiction content but does not otherwise leap to the front of the pod.

(Board book/novelty. 1-3)