Egg. By Kevin Henkes.
Greenwillow/HarperCollins. $17.99.
The Story of the Easter Bunny.
By Katherine Tegen. Illustrated by Sally Anne Lambert. HarperFestival. $7.99.
Fancy Nancy and the Missing
Easter Bunny. By Jane O’Connor. Illustrations by Robin Preiss Glasser and
Carolyn Bracken. HarperFestival. $4.99.
Take the same topic and the
same age range, and authors will come up with a wide variety of ways to entertain
children. For example, if the topic is eggs and the age range is 4-8, Kevin
Henkes shows one utterly delightful way to get kids interested in his simple,
simply titled and simply wonderful Egg.
The first pages are divided into four equal parts, each displaying an egg of a
different color: pink, yellow, blue and green. Then cracks develop in three of
the eggs – but not the green one. Then birds hatch from three eggs – but not
the green one. And then the little birds say good-bye and fly away – leaving
the green egg still waiting. Really
waiting. One page shows it 16 times in 16 identical squares, each with the word
“waiting” at the bottom. So the birds come back to investigate, and soon they
go “peck-peck-peck” at the green egg – another page divided into 16 boxes shows
how long they continue doing it – and then, finally,
the green egg goes “crack,” and out comes, as Henkes writes, a “surprise!” It
is not a baby bird at all – it is an adorable little alligator. But it scares
the birds, and they fly quickly away, leaving the alligator to be shown in four
equal-size square panels on one page as “alone,” “sad,” “lonely” and
“miserable.” Poor little gator! But guess what? The pink bird flies by to see
what is going on. And then the yellow bird comes over to take a look. And then
the blue one shows up. And then all three fly down to perch on the now-happy
alligator’s back and become, as Henkes puts it simply, “friends.” The end? Not
quite – because the four friends glance up at the peach-colored sun, and as the
end of the book approaches, the sun transforms into – an egg! And who knows what will happen next? Young readers – and pre-readers – will be
charmed with the story, the winning illustrations, and the chance to watch the
tale continue: the second-to-last page of the book says “the end…” (complete with
ellipsis), and then the very, very last page contains only the word “maybe”
beneath a picture of a peach-colored bird flying away. The whole book is
inventive in design and storytelling mode, and the way it invites kids to
participate in the story through the multiply divided pages and the “what
next?” ending makes Egg all the more
special.
Eggs are, of course,
associated with Easter, and a very different approach to them for the same 4-8 age
range is the one offered by Katherine Tegen and Sally Anne Lambert in The Story of the Easter Bunny,
originally published in 2005 and now available as a board book. This is
traditionally a format for the very youngest children, but not in this case,
since the narrative is quite extensive – the contrast with the few words in Egg is immediately apparent. The book
offers a pretty little freshly minted legend, in which an elderly man and woman
make and color Easter eggs, year after year, as their pet rabbit watches –
“eggs the color of daffodils and of soft new leaves and of robins’ eggs and of
violets.” The old people weave baskets during winter, and make chocolate eggs
in early spring as the snow melts. And on Easter, the man and woman bring every
child in town “a straw basket filled with Easter eggs, as they did every year.
And the little rabbit watched.” In time, the rabbit starts helping the man and
woman prepare all the Easter goodies, and some time afterwards, when the man
and woman become too old and frail to handle the work, the rabbit takes on the
entire job, moving out of town to the woods and enlisting the help of other
rabbits to get everything done in time for Easter. It is a pretty story and a
prettily illustrated one, a fable created by Tegen and Lambert and as good an
explanation as any to use when young children ask why rabbits, of all creatures,
are delivering eggs. This is a warm and cuddly story whose board-book format
makes it easy to handle for small hands – and the prose is gentle enough so it
could even be used as a bedtime book to lull little ones to sleep.
Something brighter and more
upbeat, also with an eggs-and-Easter focus and also for ages 4-8, comes in the
form of Fancy Nancy and the Missing
Easter Bunny, which is based on the series by Jane O’Connor and Robin
Preiss Glasser but has only a cover by Glasser – the interior illustrations are
by Carolyn Bracken. This is also a sticker book: 33 of them are included. The
main attraction for Fancy Nancy fanciers, though, will be the story, which is a
typical one of light misunderstanding, minor misbehavior and rapid forgiveness
by Nancy’s always-understanding parents. The Easter Bunny of the title is a
rabbit named Nibbles, class pet of Nancy’s little sister, JoJo. Nibbles is home
with Nancy and the family for Easter weekend.
Nancy, as adorably overdressed as usual and with an Easter basket that
is equally overdone, is all set for the kids’ egg hunt; she takes Nibbles out
of the cage so her friends, Bree and Freddy, can play with the bunny; but then,
in the excitement when the egg hunt starts, Nancy forgets to lock the cage
after putting Nibbles back in it, and the rabbit escapes. So instead of
searching for eggs, Nancy has to do a Nibbles hunt. She does eventually find
the rabbit, and of course her mom forgives her for leaving the cage unlocked –
but all the eggs have been found, leaving Nancy with none. To the rescue come
her friends and JoJo, who re-hide some eggs so Nancy can search for them, and
of course everything ends happily. Fancy
Nancy and the Missing Easter Bunny is a pleasant enough backyard adventure,
if not one of the most-engaging Fancy Nancy books. The stickers are nice to
have, but they are a supplement to the story rather than an integral part of
it. Kids who already enjoy Fancy Nancy will like this short spring-and-holiday-themed
book, but it is not likely to garner Nancy any new fans.
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