Mousetraps

 

Mousetraps by Pat Schmatz

Maxie is a person who looks at the world through her cartoon lens as she draws pictures of everything around her.  Her family is large, boisterous and close and little has happened to challenge her security.  Except that incident with Roddy her friend in grade school whom she abandoned when things got tough.  Now Roddy, who calls himself Rick, has returned to the community, high school and Maxie’s life.  Maxie is confronted on many fronts by how her own choices and her familial security have kept her blind to many complex situations right in front of her. 

It is a joy to watch Maxie make realizations and change in believable and interesting ways without losing what makes her herself.  Schmatz writes with an intriguing mixture of forthright plot-based writing and occasional glimpses of poetry and musing.  Maxie is an intriguing character who is neither pretty nor ugly, girly or tomboyish, lonely or popular.  She is what most teens are: somewhere in the middle but also very special and talented in her own way.

The book is also very timely in its subject matter.  Readers will get to explore the issues of being gay, bullying and violence in a book that takes each of them seriously and offers hope and solutions.  The homosexual characters in the book are far from stereotypical and offer a look at how modern families have adapted and grown to not just accept but embrace all family members.  This is done very believably and lacks any heavy-handedness.  The tone is perfection.

Appropriate for ages 14-16, this is a clever, interesting and often surprising novel.

A Young Dancer

 

A Young Dancer: The Life of an Ailey Student by Valerie Gladstone, photographs by Jose Ivey.

Enter the world of the prestigious Ailey School in New York City and view it through the eyes of Iman Bright, a thirteen-year-old student.  As she goes through her lessons in ballet, jazz, modern and West African dance, readers will understand the dedication it takes to study dance at this level.  At the same time, readers will see a normal thirteen year old who goes to school and plays the violin.  The book strikes exactly the right balance. 

Ivey’s photographs nicely capture the movement and poses of dance.  He is equally successful capturing Iman when she is out of school with her friends and family.  Gladstone’s text comes from Iman’s point of view and is simple and frank about what she is doing. 

A strong nonfiction dance title, this book takes it beyond popular dance with sparkly costumes and to a more studious and serious level.  Appropriate for ages 5-8.

The Snow Day

The Snow Day by Komako Sakai

On a very snowy day, a little rabbit awakens to discover that the snow has cancelled school.  His mother doesn’t want him to go out in the storm, but he sneaks onto the balcony to make a snow dumpling.  His mother can’t go to the grocery store, so they play cards together.  His father can’t return from his trip because of the storm.  All around them it is only snow, no traffic, just them and the snow.  When the little rabbit is getting ready for bed, he realizes the snow has stopped and he can go outside.  In the dark, they play together in the snow.

There is a tenderness in this book, a timelessness that is so beautiful.  Sakai’s art is expressive and beautiful, showing an artistry that is unusual for children’s books.  The rabbit’s ears show so much of their feelings, a small note that really carries the book.  The words of the book are understated and brief.  One can feel the emotions through the illustrations, but the words do not thrust them upon the reader.  Each reader brings themselves to the book and can see themselves reflected in its subtlety.  Simply masterful.

This is one of my favorite books of the year.  Highly recommended for a quiet snow day at home, this book will not work for a raucous group of preschoolers because of its quietness.  Appropriate for ages 3-6.

Pirates, Ho!

Pirates, Ho! by Sarah L. Thomson, illustrated by Stephen Gilpin.

This jaunty, funny book is an ideal read-aloud for any swashbuckling event you may be planning.  The pirates here are cartoony and friendly, but also willing to send someone to Davy’s Locker if necessary.  They chase down other ships, seek treasure, and force people to walk the plant.  All accompanied with the cry of Pirates, Ho!  Everything children love about pirates is right here for them to enjoy.

Gilpin’s silly illustrations very effectively make this a fun book.  Where the text could take it in a darker direction, the illustrations keep it firmly in a light-hearted spirit.  Thomson’s words are rhythmic and one can almost hear the music in them: a jaunty pirate tune of course. 

A winning pirate book that is one of the easiest to read aloud that I have seen, this book is appropriate for ages 4-6.

Just Like a Baby

Just Like a Baby by Juanita Havill, illustrated by Christine Davenier.

Ellen is a tiny baby but everyone in her family has big plans for her.  In fact, everyone wants her to turn out just like them! So aunts and uncles and cousins gather around her bassinet in droves to declare exactly what she will be.  A fisherman, a dancer, a scholar, a pilot, a musician, an athlete, and much more.  But Ellen will actually do exactly as she herself wants to, as she announces with a loud howl.

This book captures the excitement, the attention and the joy of a new baby in a large family.  Davenier’s illustrations are crowded with faces that reflect their delight.  Havill does well in keeping the book from becoming a litany of ideas and maintains a rhythm and flow to the book as a whole.  Her words dance, whoop and twirl.  My favorite passage is her description of the baby’s cry as “a cloud-ruffling yowl.”  Lovely and apt.

This delightful book is perfect for a new baby gift, but I can also see it being useful with new big siblings who will may worry about the attention paid to the new baby.  Appropriate for ages 3-6.

El Barrio

El Barrio by Debbi Chocolate, illustrated by David Diaz

Take a trip through Spanish Harlem with a young boy who is very proud of his neighborhood.  Glimpse holiday parades and a quinceanera party.  Slurp ice cold popsicles.  Hear quiet guitar music and blaring trumpets. This book presents a neighborhood using all of the senses, immersing the reader directly into this urban spicy mix.  A lovely celebration of not only this neighborhood but everyone’s.

Diaz’s illustrations, done in mixed media, glow on the page. Evoking stained glass, the colors are so deep you could believe the sun shines through them.  The paintings are framed by photographs taken in David’s own barrio and add interesting textures and patterns to the book.  Chocolate’s verse is just as vibrant and alive as the illustrations, evoking sounds, sights and tastes in a series of impressions.  It all adds up to a true celebration of a culture that we all get to participate in.

Bright illustrations and text that dances make this a great book to share.  Appropriate for ages 4-6.

My Mom Is Trying to Ruin My Life

My Mom Is Trying to Ruin My Life by Kate Feiffer, illustrated by Diane Goode.

Sure, Mom seems nice and sweet but she is definitely trying to ruin her daughter’s life!  She has five ways that her mother ruins her life:  she kisses her in front of her friends, she brings changes of clothes into school in the middle of the day, she talks too loudly, she restricts certain foods, and she worries too much that her daughter might get hurt.  Tragic, isn’t it?  But the little girl has a plan that results in her mother going to jail for trying to ruin her daughter’s life.  She would try to call her husband, but the little girl also knows that her father is trying to ruin her life, so in her plan they both are put in jail.  All seems perfect, until the girl realizes that that would leave her all alone and scared.  So maybe it’s not the best plan after all.

This sassy book has a sense of humor that keeps it from becoming bratty.  The litany of wrong-doings of both the father and mother are humorous and even children will see right through them.  Children will also enjoy spotting the holes in her plan before she realizes them herself.  Her plan is painted with such broad humor that it could only be a daydream, a passing whim.  Because all children feel this way about their parents at some time, they will relate effortlessly to the feelings on the page.  Goode’s illustrations nicely use the white space on the page.  They offer breezy lines done in watercolors that appear effortless and tie into the humor of the text well.

A great ironic choice for Mother’s Day that will cut through books that can become a little too sweet when read all together, this book is appropriate for ages 5-7.

Dinosaurs Roar, Butterflies Soar!

 

Dinosaurs Roar, Butterflies Soar! by Bob Barner.

Millions of years ago when dinosaurs roamed the earth, butterflies fluttered over it.  Butterflies and other insects aided in the flourishing of flowering plants by spreading pollen from one plant to the next.  When the meteor hit the earth and caused the extinction of the dinosaurs, butterflies and other insects survived.  The modern butterfly is very similar to its prehistoric ancestors in both size and shape.  The book offers the ability to read just one portion of the text which is more accessible to small children or to add in the interesting facts on each page which offer detailed information on the dinosaurs and butterflies.  This makes the title very flexible for teachers, parents and librarians to use with different ages.

Barner’s pastel and paper illustrations are large, colorful and filled with a playfulness that is charming.  Small children will enjoy the large dinosaurs in a rainbow of hues while older children will love the facts and enjoy the juxtaposition of large lizards and tiny butterflies in history.  The facts are intriguing and tantalizing while the text for younger children is bouncy, brief and friendly.

Recommended for all dino lovers as well as all library collections.  Appropriate for ages 3-7.

The Lion's Share

The Lion’s Share: a Tale of Halving Cake and Eating It, Too by Matthew McElligott.

The author of the charming Bean Thirteen returns with this book that features multiplication and division with such style that readers will have no idea they are enjoying a math book.  Every year, the lion invites a group of animals to share dinner with him.  This year, the ant has been invited.  She arrives just on time and is alone for awhile until the others arrive: the beetle, frog, macaw, warthog, tortoise, gorilla, hippo and the elephant.  At the table, all of the others showed horrible manners.  Then a cake is given to the elephant and he is told to help himself.  The elephant, not wanting to be too greedy, slices the cake in half and takes half for himself.  After that, each animal does the same, until it reaches the ant and the piece is too small to cut in half again.  So nothing is left for the lion.  Trying to fix things, the ant offers to bake the lion a cake for the next day.  Each animal doubles her offer, until the elephant is left at the end offering to bake 256 cakes by the next day.  Things work out with mathematical precision and logically fall into place as the ant finishes the book victorious.

McElligott has created a book with a great tone and easy style.  It has the feel of a folktale but many modern touches.  His art is equally appropriate for a folktale but also for a modern story for children.  It is a great look and feel for a picture book.  McElligott has managed to make math fun, silly and delectable.

McElligott’s text is ideal for reading aloud.  The animals are great fun to do with voices and the tiny ant makes a perfect protagonist, one easily related to by children.  The illustrations will also work well for use with a group.  Preschoolers may be young for the math, so save this one for first and second graders who will snap it up in one bite.  Or maybe they will share half with a friend…