cover image Scaredy Bath

Scaredy Bath

Zoë Foster Blake, illus. by Daniel Gray-Barnett. Penguin Workshop, $9.99 (32p) ISBN 978-0-5935-2063-5

Foster Blake (No One Likes a Fart) invites readers to walk a mile in the shoes—or at least the fancy claw-feet—of the eponymous yellow bathtub. Scaredy Bath spends all day dreading the nightly washing ordeal; a series of vignettes depict the tub’s mounting anxiety until the household’s resident kids, portrayed with light brown skin, appear “covered in spaghetti and dirt and smells” and proceed to “yank the plug! They’d whack the tap! They’d thrash and slide! They’d even pee in the water!” But after several lonely nights pass without the usual chaos, Scaredy Bath is so happy to see the family return—visual cues indicate they’ve been away at the beach—that even the inevitable peeing-in-the-water incident can’t harsh the tub’s new mellow. The story has familiar narrative contours, but its dramatic text should be a crowd pleaser (“Think about what I have to put up with,” says the toilet). Images by Gray-Barnett (Katerina Cruickshanks), which have the textures and visual spontaneity of watercolor and ink sketches, bubble with an affection for the chaos that is daily family life. Ages 3–7. (Nov.)