Ruby Rose: Off to School She
Goes! By Rob Sanders. Illustrated by Debbie Ridpath Ohi. Harper. $15.99.
Rappy Goes to School. By Dan
Gutman. Illustrated by Tim Bowers. Harper. $17.99.
On the First Day of Kindergarten.
By Tish Rabe. Pictures by Laura Hughes. Harper. $9.99.
There is always a lot of
bounciness in start-of-school stories for ages 4-8 – after all, no one wants
kids to get ready for class with a sense of foreboding – but some books are
more upbeat than others. And some have
beats to a greater degree than others do. Take, for example, Rob Sanders’ story
of a little girl who just can’t, just won’t, sit still, Ruby Rose: Off to School She Goes! It’s not that Ruby Rose has a
limited attention span – in fact, she has a very good one, but it is fixated on
dancing, which she does constantly at home and therefore inevitably brings with
her to school. Why, she does ballet during breakfast and belly dancing while
brushing her teeth! So of course she hip-hops off the school bus and arabesques
to art class and pirouettes to her easel – causing predictable trouble as she
spatters paint on her teacher, Ms. Dempsey, who tells Ruby Rose she has “never
danced in my life.” Gently and then with increasing firmness, the teacher and
other adults in school tell Ruby Rose that she has to sit still and participate
in class without distracting herself and the other students. But the
irrepressible little girl just has to
prance in P.E., promenade into the library, and get her entire class to
tap-dance to lunch and line dance back to the classroom. Debbie Ridpath Ohi’s
illustrations make Ruby Rose so endearing, her dancing so natural and
unforced-looking, that it is hard to understand why the adults in school don’t
simply join in. And in fact, after enforcing strict rules that prevent mambo
during math, rumba during reading, and samba during science, Ms. D herself ends
up dancing after all. It isn’t quite what Ruby Rose or anyone else had in mind
– it happens because of an accident resulting in the escape of all the ants
from an ant farm – but nothing dampens Ruby Rose’s delight in dance or her
enthusiasm as she hulas down the hall and bounces onto the bus to head home.
The sheer exuberance of the book is delightful, and the expression on Ruby
Rose’s mom’s face when the girl explains that, “by the way,” they have to buy a
new ant farm, makes a priceless ending.
Dan Gutman’s Rappy the
Raptor goes for music in a different way – or for lyrics, anyway. As his name
shows, Rappy raps, not just sometimes but all the time. Even when he is worried
about the first day of school: “I need pencils and pens./ Do you think I’ll
make friends?/ Will my teacher be kind?/ I’m losing my mind!” Unlike Ruby Rose,
who sees no reason to contain her personality just because she happens to be in
school, Rappy decides, “I’m not gonna talk or sing;/ I’m not gonna say a
thing.” But his determination is soon put to the test when a big, mean-looking
dinosaur kid named Chris makes fun of a shy little dino child named Aidan.
Rappy goes into a bouncy rap that distracts Chris and everyone else and gives
Aidan time to collect himself as all the dino kids bounce along to Rappy’s
recitation and the teacher approvingly looks on. But then it is time for actual
school work, and Rappy is embarrassed when called on to spell words – he is no
good at spelling. Who is? Aidan, it turns out. And in the spirit of “one good
turn deserves another,” Aidan now helps Rappy – and Rappy soon finds himself
rapping the spellings of words. Soon Rappy and Aidan are hanging out together
and having fun, and mean old Chris has to stay after school for being a bully.
The lesson? “Tomorrow I’ll go back to school./ Learning stuff is really cool./
Now I know that in the end/ all you need is one good friend.” This is Gutman’s
second Rappy book, again with illustrations by Tim Bowers that nicely
communicate the characters’ personalities and Rappy’s unendingly positive
attitude. Families that like rap will certainly like this.
And families that go for
something a bit more traditional will certainly enjoy Tish Rabe’s On the First Day of Kindergarten. Rabe
here recasts “The 12 Days of Christmas” in a pleasant, age-appropriate
celebration of kindergarten made more enjoyable by Laura Hughes’ digitally created
ink-paint-and-collage illustrations. The little girl at the center of this
story may not dance or rap, but she has lots of experiences that young readers
will enjoy saying in the cadence of the familiar Christmas song, or even
singing to its tune. For instance, “On the sixth day of kindergarten/ I thought
it was so cool/ sliding down the slide,/ SINGING A SONG!/ running in a race,/
counting up to ten,/ making lots of friends,/ and riding the bus to my school!”
The always-capitalized “SINGING A SONG” is the “five golden rings” line from
the original 12 days; the days at kindergarten mount up in their own cadence,
so that by the 12th-day field trip there is a whole list of
enjoyable activities – helping explain the very kindergarten-class-photo-like
back-cover picture, in which everyone is clearly happy even though not all the
kids are paying quite as much attention as the photographer might have wished. The
girl whose story Rabe tells, though, is sitting politely right in the middle of
the first row of kindergartners, hands folded on her lap, wearing the sort of
smile that can only mean she has been having wonderful experiences and finding
them thoroughly enjoyable – all 12 melodic days of them.
No comments:
Post a Comment