Chicken in Space. By Adam
Lehrhaupt. Illustrated by Shahar Kober. Harper. $17.99.
Paddington Sets Sail. By
Michael Bond. Illustrated by R.W. Alley. Harper. $16.99.
Gary’s Garden. By Gary
Northfield. David Fickling Books. $7.99.
Animals of all sorts have
adventures of all sorts in children’s books of all sorts – including these. Chicken in Space is not really about a
chicken in space, but about the power of imagination. In the book, a chicken
named Zoey (who, Adam Lehrhaupt immediately explains, “wasn’t like the other
chickens”) plans to go to space and
then imagines doing so. Zoey has a
friend, Sam, who happens to be a pig, and whose main interest is not space
exploration but pie. No matter: Zoey can dream big enough for them both. And
she does, despite the skepticism of the local dog, eyeglasses-wearing mouse,
and cow. Zoey appears to read a lot of corporate motivational posters, although
kids ages 4-8 will not realize that. For
example, Zoey says one issue is not a problem but an opportunity; then, when
she and Sam actually get into “space” – that is, use a basket topped with
balloons to rise a bit off the ground – Zoey redefines a flying baseball as an
asteroid, a kite as a comet, and birds as “alien attack ships.” Later, after
the basket crashes (Zoey calls it “a perfect landing”), Sam gets to tell the
other animals about the asteroid, comet and alien ships, and “everyone was
impressed.” Asked just how they made their remarkable space journey, Sam
explains that “Zoey always finds a way,” and sure enough, she even finds a way
at the end to get Sam the pie he has been hoping for throughout the book – it
is a moon pie, of course. The gentle absurdity of Chicken in Space, highlighted by Shahar Kober’s amusingly
appropriate illustrations, may even encourage kids in the target age range to
indulge in some big dreams themselves.
Paddington Bear’s goals tend
to be much more modest, despite his original journey from “darkest Peru” to
London back in 1958, when Michael Bond wrote the first book about him. One of
Paddington’s numerous small adventures takes place in Paddington Sets Sail, which is in the “I Can Read!” series as a
Level 1 book (“simple stories for eager new readers”). Because the book was
actually done by Bond and frequent Paddington illustrator R.W. Alley, not by
others “based on” Bond’s work, the story, simple as it is, has plenty of
soft-pedaled charm. It is a beach story – Paddington’s first-ever trip to the
beach, in fact – and involves a sand-castle contest in which Paddington makes
the best castle he can, puts his hat on top of it, and then, tired by all his
work, falls asleep. When the tide comes in, it knocks the castle down and
sweeps Paddington out to sea in his pail, clutching his little shovel as if it
is an oar – with his bemused expression, directed right at readers, being the
book’s most-amusing illustration. Of course, Paddington does not get far, and
is soon hauled in by a helpful fisherman who snags the pail with a hook.
Paddington ends up a celebrity – other beachgoers think he has floated in from
far away – and then is reunited with the Brown family for the trip home. The
book manages to be true to its reading level and to the spirit of
Paddington-style adventures at the same time – a winning combination.
The adventures in Gary’s Garden are also mundane, and they are rather strange, too.
Gary Northfield – who pictures himself as a bearded guy sitting in a lawn chair
and doing not much of anything – imagines the worms and caterpillars and
butterflies and birds and spiders and stick insects and snails and other garden
denizens having all sorts of conversations and taking part in all sorts of
activities just beyond human ken. In this series of short, illustration-driven
stories that collectively make up a simple graphic novel, the events are
small-scale – and so is the lettering, a fact of which adults who may want to
read with their children should be aware. Some of the brief stories are
standalones, while others present recurring themes. One tale, for example, is
“First Legs,” in which a tadpole (whose name, readers learn at the book’s end,
is Jennifer) is the very first to grow a pair of legs, and thoroughly enjoys
zipping about among the other, legless tadpoles. But soon, all the rest grow a
first pair of legs – and then a second
pair, which Jennifer does not. This leads to a “sigh” at the end of the story
and a later piece called “Last Legs,” in which Jennifer strains mightily to
grow more legs and ends up, instead, with – a head of hair. Elsewhere is the
story of Ronald the Spider, an enthusiastic entertainer who plays to a captive
audience of insects caught in his web; and there is a two-part tale in which
“Professor Ladybug Zarpov” discovers the bizarre land of Zarpovia (actually the
inside of Gary’s house) and explores it along with “Larry Ladybug, lord of the
jungle” (introduced in an earlier story) and “John Ladybug, explorer of Mars”
(ditto). There is also the story in which Rupert the squirrel gathers worms for
a mole who is too nearsighted to catch them and is therefore eating Rupert’s
acorns – except it turns out that the mole is not nearsighted but is simply a
vegetarian. There are also meetings of the camouflage and mimicry clubs,
causing some confusion for bugs that are not sure what the difference is. And
so on. There is nothing profound in Gary’s
Garden and, for that matter, nothing exceptionally amusing – but the series
of offbeat antics featuring small-scale adventures and small-scale adventurers
will please kids looking for stories told from unusual angles and with a series
of humorous twists.
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