Lives of the Explorers:
Discoveries, Disasters (and What the Neighbors Thought). By Kathleen Krull.
Illustrated by Kathryn Hewitt. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $20.99.
Bats at the Library. By Brian
Lies. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $6.99.
Five Little Monkeys Wash the Car.
By Eileen Christelow. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $7.99.
Five Little Monkeys with Nothing
to Do. By Eileen Christelow. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $7.99.
Five Little Monkeys Bake a
Birthday Cake. By Eileen Christelow. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $7.99.
The long-running and always fascinating
Lives of… series of brief,
anecdote-laced biographies by Kathleen Krull and Kathryn Hewitt is even better
than usual in Lives of the Explorers,
and that is saying a lot in light of the ongoing excellence of the sequence. On
the surface, the book follows the same format as the many previous ones, with
17 brief chapters covering the peregrinations of 20 explorers from many times
and many places. As usual, there are highly familiar names (Marco Polo,
Christopher Columbus, Ferdinand Magellan) mixed with ones that young readers
are unlikely to know (Ibn Battuta, Zheng He, Auguste and Jacques Piccard). Also
as usual, Krull is at pains to include members of both genders and multiple
ethnicities. What is even better than usual here, though, is the wealth of
detail in the chapters – there is almost no “filler” – and the care Krull takes
to present the coincidences and sometimes sordid realities of exploration. For
example, “only eighteen of the original [Marco Polo] crew of six hundred
survived” to return to Venice, and “of the original crew [of Magellan’s ships],
only about eighteen [of more than 250] survived.” Many doubted Marco Polo’s
accounts of his travels, but not Christopher Columbus, “who had a much-thumbed,
notated copy of Travels with him on
his boat in 1492.” Henry Hudson’s crew ambushed him and threw him off his ship
– Magellan’s crew also mutinied. On land, Daniel Boone “was short [and] hated
coonskin caps (he always wore a hat made of beaver felt).” The Indians’
reaction to the Lewis and Clark expedition: “The white men, who rarely bathed,
struck them as smelly.” Richard Francis Burton had such a racy reputation that,
after his death, his widow “burned almost all forty years’ worth of his
journals.” Mary Kingsley beat back a crocodile with a paddle when it tried to
get into her boat. Auguste Piccard inspired the character of Professor Cuthbert
Calculus in the Tintin comics; his
son, Jacques, was the first man to descend to the lowest known point on Earth;
his grandson, Bertrand, made the first round-the-world balloon flight. Add to
all these well-researched tidbits of information the fact that Hewitt’s
trademark illustrations, showing the explorers with disproportionately large
heads and in scenes indicative of who they were and what they did, are drawn
here with greater skill and in greater detail than those in earlier books, and Lives of the Explorers emerges as a real
winner in a series filled with them.
The Bats books by Brian Lies
are consistent delights, too, and the new paperback edition of Bats at the Library – originally
published in hardcover in 2008 – shows why. Drawn with great care and attention
to anatomical detail, Lies’ bats pose in humanlike ways and do humanlike
things, the highlight in this book being a wonderful depiction of the way that
books in general pull readers into their worlds: “Everyone – old bat or pup –/
has been completely swallowed up/ and lives
inside a book instead/ of simply hearing something read.” Lies goes on to show
bats in illustrations delightfully reimagined from all sorts of stories, some
of which kids (and parents) may recognize and some of which are more obscure –
bats show up everywhere from the road to Oz to the famous Make Way for Ducklings scene in which a policeman stops traffic,
and Lies even shows an older bat reading Goodnight
Sun (not, of course, “moon”) to two young ones. Mr. Bat’s Wild Ride, Pooh
Bat, Little Red Riding Bat and many more are here, all beautifully conceived
and wonderfully drawn, all constituting a marvelous library visit for the
anthropomorphic-but-realistic bats and all adding up to a book that is a joy to
discover – or rediscover.
The Five Little Monkeys series by Eileen Christelow continues to be plenty of fun, too. The new board-book version of Five Little Monkeys Wash the Car, a
series entry originally released in 2000, gives parents and young children a
chance to enjoy or re-enjoy what happens when the little monkeys decide to
spruce up Mama’s old car to help her sell it – and end up having it roll down
into the swampy lake where the crocodiles live. But these crocs, although
boastful and theoretically dangerous, are really pretty good guys, and they not
only help the little monkeys get the car unstuck but also help them solve the
problem of selling and replacing it. Much of the fun here comes from watching
the little monkeys do what they think is needed to make the car more attractive
to buyers: “Then four little monkeys/ find paint in the shed./ Blue, yellow,
and green,/ purple, pink, and bright red./ They paint the old car/ with designs
all around,/ while one little monkey/ sprays perfume he found.” The rest of the
enjoyment comes from the interactions with the crocodiles – and Mama’s
expression when she wakes up from a nap and discovers everything that went on
while she slept. Throughout the book, one or another of the monkeys says “I
know!” to help solve a problem. What parents will know is that kids will have a
great time reading this book, or having it read to them.
And for parents concerned
about books that dwell so much on the constant unsupervised activity, even
hyperactivity, of the little monkeys, there is now a board-book version of Five Little Monkeys with Nothing to Do,
which originally dates to 1996. Here, for a change, it is Mama insisting that
the little monkeys get up and get going when they repeatedly say they are bored
and have nothing to do. Anticipating a visit from Grandma Bessie, Mama tells
the little monkeys all the things they can do to get ready: clean their room,
scrub the bathroom, beat the dirt out of the rugs, and pick berries. The fun
here is seeing the enthusiasm with which the formerly bored little monkeys
throw themselves into all the household chores – until Mama tells them to come
home from the berry patch, wash their faces and put on clean clothes before
Grandma Bessie arrives. So the little monkeys enthusiastically do just what
Mama says, getting themselves as clean, neat and tidy as can be. And everything
is just fine – well, almost. What the little monkeys never considered was how
messy they were when they hurried home (as Mama told them to) from their berry
picking so they could wash themselves and change their clothes. Sure enough,
they have managed to track dirt and mud all over the house in their rush to
clean up. And so, when Grandma Bessie arrives and the house is a complete disaster,
the little monkeys are left wondering who could possibly have messed things up
– and Mama is left to remark that “whoever did this has plenty to do!” The
little monkeys’ misadventures remain as amusing in board-book form as they were
when originally published. Kids who want to learn to read these board books
themselves will have plenty to do, and plenty to enjoy.
And speaking of messes and
little monkeys, there is also a new board-book version of Five Little Monkeys Bake a Birthday Cake, originally published in 1992.
Here the little monkeys wake up early, determined to celebrate Mama’s birthday
in their own inimitable style – which readers will quickly realize means there
is trouble ahead. And so there is: trying to be quiet while baking a cake for
their still-sleeping mother, the little monkeys completely mis-measure pretty
much everything, add far too much of this and that, spill things and fall and finally
put the cake in the oven while they go back upstairs to make a gift for Mama.
Needless to say, their gift-making is very noisy indeed, but each time the
little monkeys check, Mama – who sensibly wears earmuffs to bed – remains sound
asleep. Soon the cake overflows all over the oven and makes such a big mess
that two firemen show up – but end up helping to frost the cake and to get Mama
up to enjoy it. And Mama is indeed delighted – except that it turns out the
monkeys got the date wrong and tomorrow
is Mama’s birthday. Well, they can always make another cake – but the book ends
before Mama goes downstairs to discover the state of the kitchen, so who knows
what will actually happen? The determined adorableness of the little monkeys,
and the unending toleration of Mama, combine to make this a highly enjoyable
entry in Eileen Christelow’s series – as much fun now as it was more than two
decades ago.
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