Farmer Dale’s Red Pickup Truck.
By Lisa Wheeler. Illustrated by Ivan Bates. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $7.99.
Reasons My Kid Is Crying. By
Greg Pembroke. Three Rivers Press. $15.
The littlest children – or
rather the littlest ones with enough attention span to handle a read-aloud book
– will have a simply wonderful time with the new board-book version of Lisa
Wheeler’s Farmer Dale’s Red Pickup Truck,
originally published in 2004. A rollicking rhyming story with a lot more going
on than is usual in a board book, and with Ivan Bates illustrations that
amplify the fun and keep the pace quick, Wheeler’s poetic tale relates the
far-from-simple journey of Farmer Dale (a dog) to town with a load of hay. It
seems that various animals keep getting in the way of the truck – first a bossy
cow, then a woolly sheep, then a “roly pig,” a goat with an accordion,
and…well, at this point the truck, in which Farmer Dale has been obligingly
giving all the animals a lift to town, is so overloaded that it can no longer
move. How it gets out of that mess – with the assistance of still more animals
– is the subject of the remainder of the book, as Wheeler’s poetic cadences
keep the story moving even when the truck cannot. “The truck bounced up. The
springs all popped./ The bumper bumped. The pickup stopped.” The animals here
actually have personalities, in the writing as well as the illustrations: “The
pickup rocked and rumbled./ It rolled an inch or so./ ‘It’s moooving!’ shouted
Bossy Cow./ The rooster crowed, ‘Too slow!’” For that matter, the truck itself
has a personality: “The pickup bounced and shimmied./ It groaned and squeaked
and wheezed./ It spit a thankful cloud of smoke/ and started with a sneeze.”
Kids from babies to toddlers not only will enjoy the rhymes but also will have
fun finding out, at the book’s end, that everyone was heading to town for a
talent contest. That explains the
goat with the accordion!
Now, what explains the many
and varied expressions of dismay, anger and all-around angst on the faces of
the entirely human babies in the (+++) Reasons
My Kid Is Crying? Based on Greg Pembroke’s Tumblr blog – whoever thought
the Internet would kill printed books did not reckon with this sort of
cross-pollination – the book features many dozens of photos of many dozens of
boy and girl toddlers, all in the “easy meltdown” age range, all melting down
for reasons that run from the possibly real to the entirely fanciful. For a
little girl with a scrunched-up face: “She’s not allowed to eat garbage out of
the garbage can.” Boy in a highchair: “He threw his dinner on the floor and now
he wants to eat.” Boy with two fingers in his mouth and a pained expression:
“He wanted to wear socks and flip-flops.” (And that would be terrible…why?)
Girl with face and bib coated in spaghetti sauce or something equally red and
messy: “I told her that I had to wash her face after dinner.” Little boy next
to adult woman who is holding the handle of a sharp tool: “His aunt wouldn’t
let him play with this ax.” Boy standing in pool: “Water got on his bathing
suit.” Boy in kitchen: “I wouldn’t let him eat this unsweetened cocoa powder by
the spoonful.” Boy near television set: “We turned on his favorite show the
minute he asked us to.” Enough already? But there is more, much more, some of
it funny, some of it mildly witty (but not very
witty), some of it silly and some of it instantly recognizable by any parent of
a current or former toddler. The problem is that there is much more of this, and a book with an endless parade of unhappy
children’s faces, contorted and/or in tears, comes across very differently from
a blog into which computer users can dip briefly and from which they can quickly
depart at will. True, it is possible to read just a few pages of Reasons My Kid Is Crying and then put it
aside, coming back to it later, but this is a book with very few words and a
lot of pictures, clearly meant to be read quickly, and the whole point of it –
to the extent that it has a point – is to show how many different ways kids of
a certain age melt down. The totality of the thing turns out to be more
depressing than funny: do you really want to see page after page of young
children in full evidence of misery, even if they show it theatrically and even
if you know (as you will if you are a parent) that the “slights” are minor and
the kids’ tantrums short-lived? A little of Reasons
My Kid Is Crying goes a long way, and it is easier to engage with just a
little of this sort of thing online than in book form. Still, fans of the blog
are likely to enjoy seeing some of the postings in a high-quality printed book.
Some of them.
No comments:
Post a Comment