Box of Bats. By Brian Lies.
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $16.99.
Flip & Fin: Super Sharks to
the Rescue! By Timothy Gill. Illustrated by Neil Numberman.
Greenwillow/HarperCollins. $15.99.
Brian Lies’ books about bats
are individually wonderful and, in a three-book boxed set, virtually
irresistible. Lies has clearly studied animal anatomy carefully, and just as
clearly thought through how animals’ bodies would look if the animals engaged
in human pursuits. As a result, his books look like no others in their
combination of realism and anthropomorphism: a Lies illustration is immediately
recognizable. Box of Bats includes
small hardcover versions of Bats at the
Ballgame (originally published in 2010), Bats at the Library (2008), and Bats
at the Beach (2006). All are thoroughly wonderful to see and sometimes
exceptionally funny. The cover of Bats at
the Beach, for example, shows a bat in the foreground with a nicely toasted
marshmallow from which cricket legs stick out – many bats are insectivores,
after all. And the background shows a bat on the sand “flying” another bat like
a kite. The concepts are outrageous, but Lies’ illustrations are so good that if activities like these were to be done by bats, this is exactly how the bats would look when doing them. Bats at the Ballgame eschews easy puns
on batting and batters for a wonderful imagining of how bats would play baseball if they could play it. The fans, for example,
hang upside-down, while “A flying vendor flutters near./ ‘Mothdogs! Get your mothdogs here!’/ Raise a wing and catch a
snack:/ ‘Perhaps you’d like some Cricket
Jack?’” And a grandfather bat, with eyeglasses neatly perched on his face,
remembers baseball back through the years in a marvelous series of pictures
that start in color and end in sepia. Bats
at the Library features a wonderful view of bats hanging upside-down from a
lampshade while reading and an even-more-wonderful one in which illustrations
from famous children’s books are reinterpreted by Lies in bat-focused ways: for
instance, the well-known traffic-cop picture from Make Way for Ducklings now has the policeman allowing a mother bat
and her babies to cross the street. Young readers may not know all the
references, but adults can provide them (if they
know them!) and can use them as entry points to the original stories. Bats at the Library ends with Lies
writing, “For now, we’ll dream of things we’ve read,/ a universe inside each
head.” Children lucky enough to have Box
of Bats – which even comes with a page of bat stickers as a bonus – will
encounter their own universe of wonder, thanks to a remarkably skilled and
clever author.
Timothy Gill’s second book
about sand-shark twins Flip and Fin is far more mundane fun – or watery fun,
given that it takes place in and near the beach. But Super Sharks to the Rescue! is clever in its own way, with Neil
Numberman’s illustrations neatly displaying the characters’ personalities and
keeping the action going. And there is plenty of action here, as the title
characters decide to become “super sharks” like their cartoon favorites, Sammy
Saw Shark and Harry Hammerhead. So, after some hijinks and bad jokes, and after
getting together with their friends Swimmy and Molly, Flip and Fin look for
super deeds to do. They discover a beach ball floating in the water and realize
that it must belong “to the human people,” so they decide to become heroes by
returning it. And they head for the beach – where, of course the beachgoers
spot them, are terrified, and dash out of the water, yelling for help. Flip and
Fin are puzzled: what’s the problem? Then they realize that the people must be scared, not of course of the sharks, but
of the ball. So they heroically
decide to help out by playing catch with the ball and then popping it and
getting rid of it “far out to sea.” Their super-work done, the sand sharks and
their friends head into open water as the people on the shore cheer their
departure – which the sharks interpret as cheering for their rescue of the
people from the scary ball. This sort of misunderstanding seems right in
character for Flip and Fin, and so do their exclamations of “Faster than a
sailfish!” and “Tougher than a clamshell!”
Gill offers a concluding page about real sand sharks, which indeed like
to live close to beaches and are not generally considered dangerous to humans.
Kids should not, however, expect the real ones to have the ebullient
personalities and thoroughgoing silliness of Flip and Fin!
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