Basher 123. By Simon Basher.
Kingfisher. $16.99.
Go! Go! BoBo: Opposites; Time.
By Simon Basher. Kingfisher. $6.99 each.
Manga was never like
this. Or, well, it was, but only in other books by Simon Basher, who adopts
manga drawing conventions and adapts them for a very clever and eminently
readable series of instructional books for the very youngest learners and those
who are slightly older. Basher 123 is in the “slightly older”
category, for ages 3-6, and is quite different from the many other counting
books out there. Basher’s art is one
reason; his approach to numbers is another.
From the first page, this book is clearly out of the ordinary: the
number one is represented by “one smiling snake” that “cuddles his teddy
bear.” Now there’s an image you won’t
find in other counting books! Nor will
you find most of the others that Basher depicts here: the “three messy pigs”
baking tiny cupcakes, the “four freaky frogs” with holes in their socks, the
“seven tiny rabbits” that “jump around in cowboy hats,” the “nine daring
ladybugs” that “show off on their skateboards,” and so on up to the number
20. That’s right, 20 – early counting
books tend to stop at 10, but not Basher’s.
When “twelve twinkling stars wave a bright hello to Earth,” the figure
of Earth – a globe atop a foreshortened manga body known as a chibi – shows the
manga influence on Basher particularly well.
Other illustrations highlight Basher’s offbeat humor to particularly
good effect, such as “seventeen hungry flies take a lollipop home for dinner,”
a delightfully silly picture made even more so by the fact that the lead fly is
carrying a bright red arrow pointing the way home. Whether drawing 19 naughty sheep, 20 sleepy
spiders or 13 speedy snails (in red racecars), Basher makes counting fun and
highly amusing on right-hand pages while keeping left-hand ones
straightforward, using them to show the numeral, the spelled-out word for the
number (such as “twelve” or “eighteen”), and where the number fits in the
sequence of 1 to 20 (each page shows the full sequence; the specific number is
underlined). The final four pages, which
recap all the numbers and show smaller versions of the drawings, are a great
way to review counting lessons and are highly enjoyable in their own way.
BoBo’s way is highly
enjoyable, too. BoBo is Basher’s bouncy
baby for kids up to age four, swooping and swirling his way through brightly
colored illustrations of Opposites
(loud/quiet, fast/slow, dirty/clean, and so forth) and Time (play time, lunch time, bath time, etc.). The BoBo board books are extremely sturdy,
their illustrations done in colors so brilliant and saturated that adults may
feel their eyes popping if they stare at the pages too long – which makes the
books perfect for very young children whose vision is still in the
developmental stage (and who, let’s face it, like hyper-bright colors). Each
reader of these books will have his or her favorite pages – in Opposites, perhaps BoBo playing the drum
set (with his name emblazoned on it) or jumping in a muddy puddle; in Time, perhaps the messiness of breakfast
time (with nine overflowing bowls of cereal and a container of spilling milk)
or the sheer colorfulness of park time (with the sun, a pogo stick, brightly
colored ice-on-a-stick, and balls bouncing everywhere). The one peculiarity of the BoBo books remains
the conception of BoBo himself: he always wears a bandage on his head, implying
an injury, and his eyes are shaped like the letter X, which in cartoon language
(manga included) usually means a character is unconscious or hurt, if not dead. BoBo is clearly very much alive and not in
any pain – his activities are nothing if not super-enthusiastic – but his
appearance is at odds with what he does, and may be confusing for children
(including very young ones) who have seen any manga or other cartoon
adventures. BoBo’s mouth does indicate
his moods – an open “o,” a smile, a squiggle representing confusion, and so
forth – but his eyes and bandage are out of touch with the rest of his
appearance. Parents should be prepared
with some sort of explanation if children (even really young ones) ask whether
BoBo “is feeling all right,” or at least not be surprised by the question. Probably the best answer is something along
the lines of, “Sure he is – look at all the fun he is having.” But Basher’s decision to draw BoBo in a way
that even invites the question is a small destabilizing element in what is otherwise
a first-rate introduction to a wide variety of concepts.
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