Kate Banks, , illus. by Georg Hallensleben. . FSG/Sunburst, $5.95 (32pp) ISBN 978-0-374-43558-5
PW
wrote in a starred review, "As night gently envelops the landscapes, the words and art convey the snug warmth of a featherbed and a world as small as a neighborhood." Ages 3-5. (Mar.)
In this disarming reflection on permanence, the creators of And If the Moon Could Talk
find the sublime in an ordinary stone. They begin in the present, as a Continue reading »
The title character of Banks's (The Night Worker) somewhat mannered first novel cannot understand how his "smart" and "nice" parents could Continue reading »
This window into the parallel domestic and working worlds of two busy parents provides an upbeat look at contemporary life. As Mama closes up her pet shop and makes her way home through the hectic Continue reading »
Three unlikely animals share the same tree as their jungle home until, as a group, they set out to separate. In a starred review, PW
called this rebus-style Continue reading »
Banks's (Dillon, Dillon) mesmerizing prose draws readers into the world of 14-year-old Rachel as she struggles to understand the repercussions of a family Continue reading »
In this sympathetic tale, a dislocated gray cat migrates from Rouen to St.-Tropez. (A back-cover map of France shows the traveler's zigzag itinerary.) Originally, the cat lives in southern Continue reading »
"A naïve young baboon, just discovering his world, extrapolates from every encounter in this quasi-metaphysical tale," said PW
. "The expansive, Continue reading »
When the title character wonders how his parents could have given him a first name that is the same as his last, he embarks on a journey of self-discovery. PW
Continue reading »
Both clever and funny, Banks's (And if the Moon Could Talk
) inventive picture book features literal and rambunctious word play. Max's brothers, Benjamin Continue reading »
Frequent collaborators Banks and Hallensleben compose an appealing, idealized story of a young fox eager for independence. As the seasons shift, the kit's watchful parents teach him how to Continue reading »
This exceptional portrait starts out like a variation on Louis Sachar’s inimitable There’s a Boy in the Girls’ Bathroom
: the protagonist, Continue reading »
The smudgy lines of Hallensleben's soft-focus acrylics capture the tranquillity of a snowy day in a semirural setting, while Banks's text reads like a lullaby, as “something” Continue reading »
Banks and Kulikov's (Max's Words
) latest collaboration stars three plucky pencil-top erasers—a green crocodile, blue owl, and pink pig—who Continue reading »
With quiet phrases and luxurious color, Banks and Hallensleben (Baboon) evoke a perfectly peaceful bedtime. In a stuccoed house, amid tranquil lakes and orderly rows of trees, a girl plays with Continue reading »
Banks and Hallensleben, whose And If the Moon Could Talk prepared children for a calm night's sleep, stay up long past bedtime in this absorbing after-hours expos . Unlike Eileen Spinelli and Melissa Continue reading »
Banks's story begins with a typical dinnertime predicamenta boy will not eat his soup. His mother notes that he is as grumpy as a bear, and so the boy fishes out the letters spelling ``bear'' from Continue reading »
A naive young baboon, just discovering his world, extrapolates from every encounter in this quasi-metaphysical tale first published in France. When Baboon comes upon a tortoise, he remarks to his Continue reading »
Delicate, dense color and a mannered geometric layout politely call for attention in this rebus picture book by Banks (And If the Moon Could Talk) and Bogacki (Cat and Mouse). Small squares, like Continue reading »
Banks's (And If the Moon Could Talk; Spider Spider) slim chapter book introduces eight-year-old Howie, who feels nervous about starting a new school in the middle of his third-grade year. When, after Continue reading »
Afraid of the Hippo in the middle, Turtle enlists a flock of friends to help her cross the river. But it's the most unlikely ally that eventually gets Turtle to the other side in The Turtle and Continue reading »
A girl's questions about the baby growing inside her mother fall naturally into poetry, whose hand-lettered lines curl and twine through Swiatkowska's haunting paintings. "This baby,/ twisting, Continue reading »
Imaginative Max, who first appeared in Max?s Words, discovers that a whole new world can unfold from one simple discovery?in this case, a wooden letter block. Using more blocks, Max builds an Continue reading »
Banks?s (This Baby) allegorical fable stands out in this genre for its understated tone and lack of pretension. Sixteen-year-old Baz, a realistic mix of fearful and brave, accepts an unknown Continue reading »
In an extraordinary portrait of the tender, meandering, and inquisitive nature of reading together, a boy and his mother read a book about a hibernating bear, turning the pages slowly and commenting Continue reading »
Alice has dark ringlets and dainty shoes, and she's learning to say please. "Mama, give me the pig," she orders. "Say please," Mama reminds her, then gives her the pig and some chickens so Alice (who Continue reading »
Banks?s verse sees some of the great cities of Europe through the travels of an independent black cat. Making her way by cat, boat, bike, and bus, City Cat romps through the Coliseum, nestles under Continue reading »
Although mathematics is front and center in this follow-up to Max?s Words and Max?s Castle, the clever wordplay of the previous books remains on display as Max and his brothers set off ?looking for Continue reading »
In this disarming reflection on permanence, the creators of And If the Moon Could Talk
find the sublime in an ordinary stone. They begin in the present, as a Continue reading »
In this sympathetic tale, a dislocated gray cat migrates from Rouen to St.-Tropez. (A back-cover map of France shows the traveler's zigzag itinerary.) Originally, the cat lives in southern Continue reading »
"A naïve young baboon, just discovering his world, extrapolates from every encounter in this quasi-metaphysical tale," said PW
. "The expansive, Continue reading »
Frequent collaborators Banks and Hallensleben compose an appealing, idealized story of a young fox eager for independence. As the seasons shift, the kit's watchful parents teach him how to Continue reading »
The smudgy lines of Hallensleben's soft-focus acrylics capture the tranquillity of a snowy day in a semirural setting, while Banks's text reads like a lullaby, as “something” Continue reading »
With quiet phrases and luxurious color, Banks and Hallensleben (Baboon) evoke a perfectly peaceful bedtime. In a stuccoed house, amid tranquil lakes and orderly rows of trees, a girl plays with Continue reading »
Banks and Hallensleben, whose And If the Moon Could Talk prepared children for a calm night's sleep, stay up long past bedtime in this absorbing after-hours expos . Unlike Eileen Spinelli and Melissa Continue reading »
In Gaspard and Lisa's Rainy Day, the first of two new titles by Anne Gutman, illus. by Georg Hallensleben, the pair's quest for fun things to do indoors lands them in hot water; and Lisa adopts a Continue reading »
A naive young baboon, just discovering his world, extrapolates from every encounter in this quasi-metaphysical tale first published in France. When Baboon comes upon a tortoise, he remarks to his Continue reading »
The white and black pups who each starred in their own paper-over-board books unite for Anne Gutman's Gaspard and Lisa at the Museum, illus. by Georg Hallensleben. Teased by their human classmates Continue reading »
In Gaspard and Lisa's Rainy Day, the first of two new titles by Anne Gutman, illus. by Georg Hallensleben, the pair's quest for fun things to do indoors lands them in hot water; and Lisa adopts a Continue reading »
The irresistible canine heroes of the paper-over-board Misadventures of Gaspard and Lisa series set out to make a gift for their teacher in Gaspard and Lisa's Christmas Surprise by Anne Gutman, Continue reading »
All aboard! Concepts come at their most appealing for smallest hands. Gaspard and Lisa's Ready for School Words by Anne Gutman, illus. by Georg Hallensleben helps teach everyday words, from Continue reading »
The team behind the Gaspard and Lisa series introduces Penelope at School by Anne Gutman, illus. by Georg Hallensleben. This preschool adventure (on heavy-duty cardstock) stars a blue koala. By Continue reading »
In an extraordinary portrait of the tender, meandering, and inquisitive nature of reading together, a boy and his mother read a book about a hibernating bear, turning the pages slowly and commenting Continue reading »
Aceves’s debut balances brash humor and fumbling first loves in an East L.A. narrative that places serious significance on mental health. Bisexual, Mexican American Enrique Continue reading »
Seton Academic High prep school’s varsity football team attributes tradition to their 12-year winning streak, and they’re not about to let anything get in the way of another Continue reading »
When 17-year-olds Ada Lovelace and Mary Shelley née Godwin meet at a party, they become thick as thieves in Ashton, Hand, and Meadows’s (My Contrary Mary) inventive historical Continue reading »
Viscerally rendered emotions and resonant chronic-illness representation build to a thrilling collaboration that deals in horror tropes. Since her diagnosis, whose treatment Continue reading »