Where’s Ellie? By Salina
Yoon. Robin Corey Books. $6.99.
Mine! By Shutta Crum.
Pictures by Patrice Barton. Knopf. $6.99.
Dinosaurs! By Matthew
Reinhart. Robin Corey Books. $6.99.
A Princess Like Me. By
Matthew Reinhart. Robin Corey Books. $6.99.
Monkey Play. By Alyssa Satin
Capucilli. Illustrated by Ariel Pang. Random House. $3.99.
Fox and Crow Are NOT Friends.
By Melissa Wiley. Illustrated by Sebastien Braun. Random House. $3.99.
Wedgieman: A Hero Is Born. By
Charise Mericle Harper. Illustrated by Bob Shea. Random House. $3.99.
The cleverness that
goes into creating attractive books for the youngest children changes form as
books are developed for kids learning to read for themselves. But pictures continue to play a big part in
all the best early-reading books. Board
books such as Where’s Ellie? and Mine! are essentially all pictorial, but they are also very
clever in design – Salina Yoon’s book particularly so. Ellie is an elephant, and the book’s cover
shows her body, with her trunk appearing on the last page – visible because of
a semicircular cutout in all the pages.
The fun here comes from seeing things that look as if they have Ellie’s
trunk but really do not. Is Ellie hiding
behind a plant? No, that is a teapot
whose spout looks like her trunk. Is she
behind the flowers? No, that is a garden
hose the same color and shape as her trunk.
Could she be behind a cactus? No,
that is a hat whose turned-up gray brim looks a bit like Ellie’s trunk. Eventually Ellie is found, and kids will
likely go along with the final-page suggestion, “Let’s play again!”
Mine! is a longer and more straightforwardly designed board book,
with more of a story and fewer words – in fact, only one: “Mine!” This is a toddler-playdate book in which one
friend says “Mine, mine, mine,” picking up everything, then dropping
everything, and then getting into a delightful splashing contest that involves
the dog’s water bowl, the dog itself, and the fun of getting toys and socks and
pretty much everything that is movable really wet. There is no harm done, though, and the dog
has a great time, too, wandering around on a route shown by a dotted line like
the one from The Family Circus newspaper
comic. Eventually the toddlers’ moms,
seen only from the legs down, show up to disentangle their little ones from all
the wet toys, while the toddlers themselves smile happily at the mess in a show
of camaraderie that will likely have kids insisting on reading the book again –
and again.
Two books by Matthew
Reinhart go somewhat beyond the board-book stage, but design is important for
them, too: there is “a pop-up on every page!” – as both covers proclaim. The pop-ups, pull tabs and lift-the-flaps
here are too delicate for the youngest readers, and some are slightly complex:
in the dinosaur book, an arrow shows where to pull on the picture of a tree to
reveal an Apatosaurus walking and eating, while a cloud must be pulled down to
show a flying Pteranodon. Reinhart does
quite a fine job of creating 3D sculptures: pulling the tail of a Tyrannosaurs
rex causes its tooth-filled mouth to open and shut, while pulling the head of
an Ankylosaurus on the next page causes its tail to strike out at the would-be
predator. The princess book is considerably
milder but just as much fun in its own way.
The princess wakes up in a huge 3D bed, with a big stretch, and kids get
to open a jewel box to reveal her crown, pull a stable door to discover her pet
unicorn, pull down the hem of her party dress to show how fancy it really is
and how elegantly her hair is made up, and finally open a page to show the
whole front of the castle and 10 other princesses, all lined up for a royal tea
party. Both of Reinhart’s books also
include pages to color – they are a very clever combination of design elements
with simple, entertaining and well-presented stories.
For kids a bit older
than the very youngest, the “Step into Reading” series offers books that are
more traditional in appearance and structure, driven by story and intended to
help children actually learn to read on their own. Monkey
Play is a Step 1 (“Ready to Read”) book for preschoolers and
kindergartners, while Fox and Crow Are
NOT Friends and Wedgieman: A Hero Is
Born are Step 3 (“Reading on Your Own”) books for grades 1-3. Well-told stories and attractive
illustrations are a must for success in books of this kind, and all three of
these have them. Monkey Play features three mischief-making monkeys at an outdoor
bazaar, playing and hiding and dressing up “in shiny hats and sparkly shoes,”
then eating a banana pie and coconut shake, then visiting a tent filled with
other animals such as cows, goats and parrots.
Slightly exotic-looking drawings, a simple rhyming story and sentences
in large print make the book fun to look at as well as to read. The Step 3 books are, of course, more
complex. Fox and Crow Are NOT Friends, which is tied very loosely to Aesop’s
fables, has the two title characters playing tricks on each other until Mama
Bear, from whom both have been taking food, catches the two of them and puts
them to work making cheese. Wedgieman: A Hero Is Born starts with Veggiebaby
making “broccoli bears, tomato tigers, spinach spiders, and even giant
green-bean gorillas,” then growing into Veggieboy and having difficulty
mastering his superpowers (among other things, he finds out that he can’t
shape-shift, no matter how hard he tries, except to turn into vegetables). Eventually he grows up and gets named
Wedgieman because of a misunderstanding that turns out to provide a very
amusing twist ending. Light-years past
the “see spot run” early readers of the past, books such as Monkey Play, Fox and Crow Are NOT Friends,
and Wedgieman: A Hero Is Born entice
young readers into the enjoyment of books through bright and funny storytelling
and amusing illustrations, deftly preparing them to read more-complex works as
they continue further into, one hopes, a lifelong love of reading.
No comments:
Post a Comment