Snippet the Early Riser. By
Bethanie Deeney Murguia. Knopf. $15.99.
Ribbit! By Rodrigo Folgueira.
Illustrated by Poly Bernatene. Knopf. $15.99.
Fancy Nancy: Puppy Party. By
Jane O’Connor. Cover illustration by Robin Preiss Glasser. Interior
illustrations by Carolyn Bracken. HarperFestival. $3.99.
The central characters in
these books for very young readers practically ooze charm. And that’s not all
that Snippet oozes – he is, after all, a snail, even if he does have a shell
that appears to be made of patched denim. Snippet is clearly not a very realistic snail, and that matters not at
all in this story of a family whose members have different waking-and-sleeping
patterns. Snippet likes to get up early and start playing, but his parents and
sister (each sporting a differently colored and patterned shell) prefer to
sleep late. Snippet is otherwise just an ordinary snail who happens to make
sculptures, play soccer with pillbugs (using them as balls), and love piggyback
rides atop his parents’ shells. (Anyone who wants some facts about real snails can find them on the book’s
inside front and back covers.) Bethanie Deeney Murguia shows Snippet and his
family curling up for the night underneath a leaf – a place where snails really
do sleep – and then shows Snippet’s vain attempts to get everyone up the next
morning. Various bug friends offer to help Snippet get the family to wake up,
but the suggestions by Grasshopper, Cricket, Ant and Firefly do not work, and
Snippet declines Stinkbug’s offer to “stink them out.” Then Snippet, watching
Caterpillar having his breakfast of leaves, has an idea of his own, and manages
to get everyone up while serving them breakfast in bed, snail style. So all
goes well, and everyone has a great time all day, and then – well, as the day
draws to a close, it is Snippet who falls asleep while everyone else stays
awake, setting the stage for a repeat of the whole process the next morning. Snippet the Early Riser has no message
beyond the soft-pedaled one of accepting other people’s differing circadian
rhythms, but it does not need any
message – it is simply a warmly amusing tale, nicely told and very pleasantly
illustrated.
However, there is a message in Rodrigo Folgueira’s Ribbit! From the way the book starts,
with Poly Bernatene’s wholly apt picture of a pink piglet sitting on a rock in
the middle of a pond and talking frog talk – to the consternation of all the
frogs – you might expect the message to be along the lines of, “Be yourself.”
But that is not it at all. Folgueira and Bernatene turn the book into a small
mystery story about a very cute but apparently clueless piglet and a set of
animals trying to figure out just what is going on. The raccoon, weasel and
parrot who come to see the strange little pig cannot offer the frogs any clues,
so the chief frog decides to pay a visit to “the wise old beetle,” who is
usually unapproachable but will surely help out in this particular case. The
frogs and other animals, “all talking at once,” try to explain the oddity to
the beetle, who decides he had better head for the pond and see for himself
what is going on. And when he arrives, he finds – nothing. The piglet is gone. Now
the animals are really puzzled, but
the beetle gives them an offhand suggestion that comes to them as a revelation
– proving his wisdom and sending all the animals off to find out where the
piglet has gone so they can join him in a hilarious final page that clearly
provides the message that friendship conquers all.
The perky personality of
Fancy Nancy is always front-and-center in Jane O’Connor’s books about her. But she shares the limelight
in Fancy Nancy: Puppy Party with her
dog, Frenchy, for whom Nancy and her parents are making a birthday party –
complete with a bacon-chicken-carrot layer cake with yogurt icing and rawhide
strings instead of candles. The scene of Nancy giving Frenchy a pre-party bubble
bath as Mom looks on, nonplussed by the mess all over the bathroom, is
delightful, and later scenes of the other dogs and people arriving for the
party are almost as much fun. This is a short book and not one with a very
surprising plot – the dogs will romp and play together, and of course that
beautifully crafted cake is going to wind up a total mess; and that is exactly
what happens. But all the guests, canine and human, are so good-natured about
everything, and the pictures of the delightful sloppiness are so amusing, that
dog-owning families are likely to be tempted to try a canine birthday party of
their own – although perhaps one a little less exciting than this. Fancy Nancy’s
perkiness shines through everything, even when she scolds Frenchy for jumping
on the cake and then finds herself giggling along with everyone else at what
has happened. By the final page and Nancy’s comment that Frenchy considers the
party “the greatest birthday celebration ever,” readers will be thoroughly
charmed – as is so often the case in stories about the très
charmant Fancy Nancy and her pleasantly indulgent family.
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