Duck, Duck, Dinosaur and the
Noise at Night. By Kallie George. Illustrated by Oriol Vidal. Harper.
$17.99.
Samson: The Piranha Who Went to
Dinner. By Tadgh Bentley. Balzer+Bray/HarperCollins. $17.99.
One of the most-common
themes in children’s books is that it is fine to be yourself, and that even if
you don’t seem to fit in, there will be others who will accept you just as you
are. You may have to make a little extra effort, but it will be worth it.
Spike, for instance, had to make an extra effort to fit in when Kallie George
and Oriol Vidal introduced him in Duck,
Duck, Dinosaur. He had to make that fitting-in effort quite literally,
because when the ducks’ mother finished hatching her eggs, one of them turned
out to be a dinosaur egg, and while
Feather and Flap were normal enough in size for ducks, Spike was – well, he was
normal enough for a dinosaur, but scarcely the right size for a duck’s nest!
And so we come to Duck, Duck, Dinosaur
and the Noise at Night, which starts as Mama Duck’s family grows too big
for her nest – much too big, in
Spike’s case. In fact, Spike is so huge that Vidal cannot fit all of him on one
page when he first shows him in this book. Well, the three little ones, one of
them a gigantic little one, have to
give Mama Duck some room by moving into their own nest, so off they go to a
resting place of their own, where they read and snuggle and fall happily asleep
– until a giant-size noise startles them all: “GRRORE!” Scared, they all wake
up and try to decide what to do – after all, they cannot just hide. Or, well,
maybe they can. So they do – and when nothing terrible happens, they resume
their bedtime rituals, fall asleep again, and then hear the same horrible noise
another time! What can they do? They cannot just run away – or maybe they can.
Well, they do, but running around makes them even sleepier, and they fall
asleep again, and then… Well, it is
obvious where this is going, because sure enough, the noise comes back – but this time the intrepid adventurers finally
figure out what completely harmless thing is going on, and by now they are so
tired that they do not need stories or snuggles or songs or anything except
rest. So all ends happily, with the three little ones (including the huge little one) sleeping peacefully
under the watchful eye of nearby Mama Duck. The story is silly and thoroughly
amusing, its “just be yourself and everything will be fine” moral is clear but suitably
downplayed, and Spike is so endearing – Vidal draws him with gigantic head and
enormous feet and essentially nothing in between – that kids will be eager to
reread this adventure while awaiting the next one.
A piranha named Samson
learns to be himself, too, in Tadgh Bentley’s Samson: The Piranha Who Went to Dinner. But it is not easy. Samson
is all huge eyes and an extremely toothy smile, and unlike the other piranhas –
who are content to sit around and watch TV and eat lots of fish – Samson has a
hankering for fine dining. There is no particular reason for this – it is just
Bentley’s way of showing how very different Samson is from the rest of his
piranha family. Well, it just so happens that not one, not two, but three fine-dining restaurants are about
to open nearby, and Samson knows he just has
to get to them to try out some elegant dishes. So off he swims to Café Pierre,
where his polite comment to a turtle waiter leads to an exclamation of “Salty
Mother of Mackerel!” and an immediate emptying of the establishment. Obviously,
Samson figures, he will never get fine food by being himself, so he dons a
disguise and heads off to Linguine’s under the name of Samson P. Rana.
Everything looks so good there that he breaks into a smile. A big smile. A big,
toothy smile. One scream of “Scaly
Neptune’s Crabcakes!” and this restaurant too is completely empty. Poor Samson!
Clearly he was not different enough
from his real self – he needs a more-elaborate disguise. And sure enough, this
gets him into the last of the fine-dining establishments. But unfortunately the
disguise includes a hat, and when the helpful waiter removes it, the hat gets
caught in the rest of the disguise, everything comes off, and “For the Love of
Smoky Sea Bass!” But not quite everyone
flees this time. It turns out that there are some other fearsome fish at the restaurant in disguise, and they too want
a chance to enjoy some first-rate food. And that gives Samson an idea. They
open their own fancy restaurant, and
at the very end of the book, in a laugh-out-loud touch of illustrative silliness,
it turns out that their food is so good that all the mild-mannered water
dwellers disguise themselves as fierce fish so they can feel comfortable eating
at the restaurant – which is suitably called “Big Bites.” So for Samson, as for
so many central characters in kids’ books, being himself turns out to be
exactly the right thing to do.
No comments:
Post a Comment