Siblings are ambivalent about the new school year.
Archie, a piglet, is starting kindergarten; big brother Pip, a platypus, is entering first grade. They’re excited but nervous, too: Archie doesn’t know if he can sit still all day and worries about what he’ll learn and how much he doesn’t know yet; Pip frets that Archie will make so many pals, he’ll forget about him. As the siblings play with their friends, Archie hears some silly, improbable stories about school (Pip smiles knowingly); then they shop for new supplies with their parents. At the store, they meet Mr. Hornsby, the kindergarten teacher, who allays Archie’s fears by patiently answering his many questions. After dinner, Pip further reassures his younger sib. Next day, the first school day, is successful: Archie learns a lot, has fun, makes new friends—and reassures Pip that he wouldn’t have been as brave without his older brother’s help. Archie acknowledges he needn’t have worried after all. This sprightly, encouraging story handles new students’ realistic concerns in an upbeat, though somewhat superficial manner; not all children will take to school quite as quickly as Archie does. Still, the illustrations are adorable, depicting an all-animal cast: Dad’s a lion, Mom’s a crocodilian, and Mr. Hornsby’s a ram. Backgrounds have a charming, childlike look.
A peppy tale sure to get kids psyched for the first day of school.
(Picture book. 4-7)