Tiptoe Joe. By Ginger
Foglesong Gibson. Illustrated by Laura Rankin. Greenwillow/HarperCollins.
$17.99.
A Special Gift for Grammy. By
Jean Craighead George. Illustrations by Steve Johnson and Lou Fancher. Harper.
$17.99.
Splat the Cat: The Perfect
Present for Mom & Dad. By Annie Auerbach. Cover art by Rob Scotton.
Interior art by Rick Farley and Joe Merkel. HarperFestival. $4.99.
The Berenstain Bears: We Love Our
Mom! By Jan & Mike Berenstain. HarperFestival. $3.99.
The Berenstain Bears: We Love Our
Dad! By Jan & Mike Berenstain. HarperFestival. $3.99.
There is something
particularly loving about springtime, when the world grows green and flowery –
and although there are specific “love” holidays in the form of Mother’s Day and
Father’s Day, they are scarcely the sole expressions of caring and warmth in a
season in which the days grow longer and move toward the sultry. Books for children
ages 4-8 seem especially open and unaffected in this season. Tiptoe Joe, for example, is not tied
directly to any specific holiday or occurrence, but it is a very loving and
very cute book all the same. The title character is a huge brown bear wearing a
perpetual smile and a pair of sneakers. He looks just ridiculous enough to
bring a smile to any young reader’s face – and when he waves directly to
readers, breaking the so-called “fourth wall” that normally keeps characters
boxed within a book, he is altogether winning. The story is super-simple:
Tiptoe Joe meets several other animals and tells each to “come with me./ I know
something you should see.” And each animal – donkey, rabbit, turkey, moose, owl
and beaver – duly follows along, making more noise than does Tiptoe Joe himself
(although not too much more). And the surprise that Tiptoe Joe eventually
reveals to them all is as adorable and sweet as can be.
A Special Gift for Grammy is a much more complicated and thoughtful
book for the same age range. It is about a boy named Hunter who gives his
grandmother a gift: a pile of stones that he has picked up, one by one, from
the road. Hunter’s father asks what they are for, and Hunter says Grammy will
do “what everyone does with a pile of stones.” His father agrees – and so does
Grammy after she asks the same question and gets the same answer. What is neat is what Grammy does do with the stones – or rather what
other people do with them in their interactions with her. The stones turn out
to be very useful to a number of people, in some straightforward but also very
clever ways. And at last there are just six small stones left. When Hunter
returns to Grammy’s house, he figures out what five of the six represent – and
then Grammy figures out how to keep those stones very close to her heart. And
the very last stone? Grammy and Hunter enjoy that one together in an ending
that makes perfect sense and lovingly cements a tale of multigenerational
understanding.
Books targeted specifically
at Mother’s Day and Father’s Day are often more straightforward than this. Splat the Cat: The Perfect Present for Mom
& Dad works equally well for either “parental” day or for both – or,
really, for neither, since Splat says he is simply making his parents a present
“to show how much he loved them.” But the gift-making becomes competitive when
Splat’s sister and brother decide to make presents for their parents, too, and
Splat thinks that theirs are better than his. All three kittens are soon going
back to work to make ever-better gifts, and then even better ones. But before things get completely out of hand, the
three decide to make a present together – and, not surprisingly, create
something elaborate that incorporates everything that have previously made.
What this turns out to be is a homemade fish tank filled with objects created
by the three kittens (Splat makes the fish) – and what the kittens then end up with is a hilarious
conclusion in which some nearby seagulls find the tank so realistic that…well,
let’s just say that the tank doesn’t last very long, and the three downcast
kittens are left sighing, “Awww…” But at
the very end, everyone is happy again, because Mom and Dad are delighted with
the present (or what remains of it), and even more delighted with the
thoughtfulness of the kittens who made it for them. A page of stickers provides
extra fun in a book whose amusing silliness never displaces its underlying
warmth of spirit.
Two new Berenstain Bears
books are targeted directly at Mother’s Day and Father’s Day, and are typically
straightforward (+++) celebrations of wholesomeness, Bear Country style. The
books are all about everyday family things that Mama Bear and Papa Bear do for
their cubs. Theirs is a very traditional family: Mama cooks, sews clothes,
heals minor injuries, does the laundry, gives baths and reads stories; Papa
plays sports, pulls the kids’ sled, carries the cubs on his shoulders, and
tells “funny stories and corny jokes.” In the Mother’s Day book, the cubs,
inspired by a visit to their grandparents and a view of the older bears’
scrapbook, make a similar book for Mama, including pictures of “all the things
that Mama would want to remember about her cubs growing up.” And of course Mama
says it is “the most wonderful Mother’s Day gift I have ever gotten!” The cubs
think of making a scrapbook for Papa, too – but Father’s Day comes later than
Mother’s Day, and Brother Bear reminds Sister Bear that they “just gave Mama an
album like that.” So the cubs, noticing that Papa is always doing work around
the house, decide to make him “gift certificates” that he can redeem to have them
do the chores. They follow him around, taking note of the many things he does,
and give him a day off for Father’s Day – but it isn’t quite a day off, because the cubs can’t really get things done as
well as Papa does, and they keep needing his help. This does not bother him at
all: “I’m getting bored just watching TV. It’s more fun doing things with you.”
So everyone works together, and then plays together, and Father’s Day proves to
be as big a success as Mother’s Day was. As always, the Berenstain Bears books
are old-fashioned and perhaps a little too perfectly pulled together for all
tastes, but kids and parents who like the characters will certainly enjoy
joining them for this latest seasonal celebration.
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