Flying Eagle

Flying Eagle by Sudipta Bardhan-Quallen, illustrated by Deborah Kogan Ray

In rhyming couplets, the story of an eagle hunting in the Serengeti National Park is told.  He has been hunting all day for food to feed his chick back in the nest but has had no luck.  Now it is sunset and different animals come out in the emerging darkness.  Readers will see hippos, rhinos, gnu, crocodiles, and even a human with a gun!  How can the exhausted eagle father find food with all of the dangers he faces?

The poetry is grippingly brief, making this a great book to share with young children looking for an African adventure filled with animals and danger.  Ray’s illustrations are deeply colored, evocative of the African world, and depict the tension of the book perfectly.

Recommended for both African and poetry units, this book is a tense tale told with vibrancy and depth.  Appropriate for ages 4-6.

Naked Mole Rat Gets Dressed

Naked Mole Rat Gets Dressed by Mo Willems.

Willems newest is a satisfying and funny picture book, just what we have come to expect from him.  Wilbur is a naked mole rat who prefers to wear clothes, something unheard of in the mole rat society.  Wilbur doesn’t understand why there is anything wrong with clothes, so the other mole rats go to complain to Grand-pah who was very wise.  He thought for some time and then decides to make a proclamation.  Wilbur heads to the proclamation wearing only blue socks, knowing that it is very important and not wanting to overstep in the fashion arena.  You will have to read the book to find out what Grand-pah said!

Willems’ text and illustrations are entirely typical of his charming, disarming, funny and clever style.  He has smart asides to the audience, illustrations that will work with a group, and of course the thrill of the NAKED mole rats.  Lovely stuff that is sure to be a hit with the preschool crowd.

The Problem with the Puddles

The Problem with the Puddles by Kate Feiffer, illustrated by Tricia Tusa

Baby’s parents agree to disagree about everything.  This means that they could not agree on a name for her when she was born.  Her mother calls her Emily and her father calls her Ferdinanda.  Everyone else calls her by the name on her birth certificate written by a nurse: Baby.  They have two dogs because her parents couldn’t agree on which type of dog to get.  They did agree on the name, Sally, so both dogs are named that.  Mr. Puddle loves the country while Mrs. Puddle loves the city, so they have homes in both.  In their hurry to leave for the city, the family forgets the dogs.  The parents disagree on whether to turn back or not.  Meanwhile, the two Sallys have realized they are forgotten and try to fix the problem themselves.  This whimsical, funny and clever novel begs to be shared.

I just love clever books.  Books that ask children to stretch a bit and reach.  The fact that this one does it in such a subtle way makes it all the more clever.  Through the lens of a light, illustrated story, children get to see a dysfunctional couple, a father who has lost his son because of lies, and a family desperately in need of a cleaning staff.  All serious subjects handled with a deftness and skill that allow the readers to stay above it all.  Lots to discuss here, the book has great writing that reads aloud with ease as well as friendly, inviting illustrations that capture the style of the writing perfectly.

Recommended as a read aloud, this book also reads alone well.  The problem here is that I don’t know if a second book is in the works or not!  That’s the problem with the Puddles!  Appropriate for ages 7-10.

Stolen

Stolen by Vivian Vande Velde.

On the same day a witch is chased to her home and it is set on fire, a girl walks out of the forest.  Isabelle seems to be a girl who was stolen from the local village six years ago.  But Isabella can’t remember anything at all.  Her family takes her in and as Isabella learns more about them, her own past is slowly revealed to her.  Is she Isabella?  Or is she someone else?  And what role does the evil witch play in all of this?

For such a brief book, this novel has intrigue, mystery and twists galore.  Readers will enjoy the character of Isabella who though confused about her own past sees others with great clarity.  The villains in the novel are deliciously evil, roles are complex and twists are built up to but not foreseen.  Even those who can predict who Isabella is will not see parts of the ending coming.  How wonderful to be right but to be surprised too.

Recommended for readers who like a good thriller.  The cover alone guarantees that this will fly off the shelves.  It also has enough depth to be a good discussion book around Halloween.  Appropriate for ages 12-14.

The Big Little Book of Happy Sadness

The Big Little Book of Happy Sadness by Colin Thompson

George lived alone with his grandmother.  He spent his Friday afternoons at the dog shelter.  He felt most at home in the dark of the last cage where the dogs spent their final days before being euthanized.  George was surprised to find a small dog looking back at him rather than cowering in the back of the cage.  The two stared at one another and a connection was made.  The pound was about to close, but George ran home to tell his grandmother about the dog.  The hairy dog had three legs so George carries him home.  As they tried to figure out a solution for the three legs, the dog began to change George’s attitude and his grandmother’s.

Both the text and illustrations are quirky in such a wonderful way.  The text laments that dogs can’t smile, emphasizes the hopelessness of George and the dogs at the pound, and explains the ugliness of the dog in a vivid way:

"Why would you want him? We’ve got 87 other dogs here.  They’ve all got four legs and bright eyes and a coat that doesn’t look like it’s covered in lard."

The illustrations have depth, character and their own style.  There are so many small touches that surprise but offer a new take on life.  The grandmother’s face has some wrinkles, but the best part is that her skin is done in a crackled glaze so she looks like her paint is about to chip off.  The wallpaper at their home is not dingy, the counter at the pound covered in a lifetime of paw prints, and small pieces of newspaper go everywhere during a papier-mache project.

Because of the question of a dog in a pound being euthanized, adults may not want to use this with sensitive kids.  But those children who veer toward the dark and depressed with find a kindred spirit here as well as hope galore.

The Uglified Ducky

The Uglified Ducky by Willy Claflin, illustrated by James Stimson

Meet Maynard Moose, a moose who finds himself in a family of ducks!  Maynard wandered away from his "moosely nest" and falls asleep near a duck nest.  Mommy Ducky is alarmed when she sees how horribly ugly the baby moose is and hopes that her other eggs will come out better.  Mommy Ducky tries to raise Maynard the best she can.  She tries to teach him to quack, but he can only Gronk, Arooo!  She tries to teach him to swim, but his hooves don’t paddle well in water.  When she takes him to Dr. Quack, he worries about the lumps forming on Maynard’s head and bandages him up.  When the Ducky family practices flying, Maynard is left behind and wanders sadly into the forest.  There he finds a lake with large moose and his own special place in life.

Claflin has taken his storytelling style and transposed it whole-heartedly to the page.  It is impossible to read this book aloud and not do voices.  Each character is written with interesting sounds, unique speech patterns, and great noises are worked into the text too.  Stimson’s illustrations are modern and very funny as well, matching the tone and style of the story. 

Highly recommended for reading aloud, this book will make a storyteller of you.  I would also recommend it for anyone who has a storytelling class where you have to read a book aloud.  This one is perfection for it.  Children and adults will enjoy the tale and its style.  Appropriate for ages 3-6.

All in a Day

All in a Day by Cynthia Rylant, illustrated by Nikki McClure

Rylant’s poetry moves through a day filled with work, blue sky, kindness, faith and rest.  It is accompanied by the stunning paper cut artwork of McClure, which elevates this simple book to a new level.  The tiny details are what make this book work so well.  Children will enjoy poring over the illustrations as Rylant’s poem carries them on to the next. 

Personally, I love all of the little touches.  The untied shoelace, the beauty of birchbark, the small whorls of peas, and dandelion fuzz blowing past.  All of these small pieces combine to create a world that we will all recognize and embrace, just as Rylant’s poem unites us all in a single day.

Highly recommended, this book is a lovely gem that has a similar palate to The House in the Night.  Appropriate for ages 4-7.

Response

Response by Paul Volponi

Volponi does it again with another short novel that is fast paced and filled with hard-to-answer ethical questions.  Noah and his friends go to an Italian-American neighborhood to steal a Lexus.  Before they are able to, they are jumped by three boys who shout racial epithets and beat Noah’s head in with a baseball bat.  Noah survives the attack and finds himself at the center of a racial controversy.  Was the other boy right to defend their community from theft?  Or was Noah and his friends targeted because they are black? 

The fast-moving prose is interspersed with police interviews of the suspects, adding to the drama.  Volponi does not come up with simple answers to the complicated questions that are raised here.  Part of his skill is in formulating the scenario and the questions but allowing the teen reader to make up their own mind.  Even the attackers are not cardboard, each emerging as a person themselves. 

So much is done in such a short number of pages that it is staggering.  Noah’s own family is not stereotypical at all.  His complicated relationship with the mother of his baby girl is equally deep and complex.   Noah’s eventual response to his attack is nuanced and mature.

Sure to be a popular read among teen boys who have probably already discovered Volponi, this book is appropriate for ages 14-18.

Heartsinger

Heartsinger by Karlijn Stoffels

Steeped in traditional fairy tales, this book offers a framing story and then a series of smaller stories that illuminate the many forms of that love can take.  A boy whose parents are deaf and dumb, becomes a gifted singer who can reveal a person’s life in his own mysterious language.  A girl whose parents fight and curse nearly all the time, plays music that has everyone dancing and feeling merry.  The two are destined to be together.  As they slowly journey toward one another, readers get to see a princess who looks only into the mirror, a sailor’s sweetheart who loves the sea she sees in her husband, and a fluting soldier who saves everyone he can.

Repetition, lilting phrases, and classic fairy tale characters keep this book closely tied to its tradition.  Readers will immediately recognize the type of book they are reading, but will be amazed at the lyrical prose, the lack of sentimentality, and the power of this small book.  Love here is seen not in saccharine sweetness, but in reality, sometimes obsessive, strangely brutal, and always powerful. 

This book is a box of chocolates with hidden depths of spices and heat that surprise and delight.  Highly recommended for teens who want a bit of classic tale and truth in their romance.  Appropriate for ages 13-17.