Superbat. By Matt Carr.
Scholastic. $16.99.
Tea with Oliver. By Mika
Song. Harper. $17.99.
Bats look a lot like flying
mice, but that is not the mouse connection in Matt Carr’s Superbat. The mice appear fairly late in the book – as Pat the bat
tries to live up to the book’s title. Pat has trouble sleeping one day and
decides to make himself a costume so he can be like his favorite comic-book
superheroes. He manages to produce the costume on his mom’s sewing machine even
though his wings keep getting in the way and the noise bothers bats who are
trying to sleep – after all, it is the middle of the day. Anyway, Pat dons the
costume and announces himself as Superbat when everyone wakes up that night.
But his friends challenge him: what super powers does he have? Well, Pat says
confidently, he has super hearing! But his friends point out that they do, too.
Pat admits he cannot lift a car or shoot laser beams from his eyes, but he can
fly! But of course all the other bats can fly as well. Aha! says Pat. He can
find things in the dark by using echolocation! But the other bats laugh at him:
“That’s nothing special. We can all do THAT!” Poor Pat – he decides he is not
special after all, “just a normal bat in a silly outfit.” But wait! Someone is
calling for help, and Pat hears the cry because of his super-sensitive hearing!
It is a family of mice, trapped all the way on the other side of town by “a BIG
bad cat.” To the rescue! Pat flies all the way to the scene of danger, flaps
back and forth despite the cat’s attempts to catch or swat him, and finally
scares the cat away. The mice are saved, and are tremendously grateful – and
Pat’s friends, who have followed him across town and seen the rescue, declare
that he does have a super power after all: courage. This is a funny and nicely
paced story that incorporates a variety of facts about bats – several more of
which Carr offers on the final page. And the broadly conceived and simply
rendered cartoon illustrations do a great job of making Pat simultaneously
silly and endearing. Even the cat, who looks on in puzzlement after running
away from the strangely caped crusader, is fun to see and really not very
threatening at all. Except, of course, to the mice.
A mouse named Philbert has
little fear of cats in Mika Song’s Tea
with Oliver, because Oliver is a cat whose tastes seem to be the same as
Philbert’s. Oliver, like Philbert, enjoys drinking tea and eating cookies, but
he has no one to join him and is lonely. What an opportunity for Philbert – if
only he weren’t “too shy to come out from under the couch.” Philbert tries to
call out to Oliver from beneath the furniture, but Oliver does not hear him. So
Philbert writes Oliver a letter asking if they can have tea together – but it
is on a very small piece of paper that Oliver sweeps under the couch while
cleaning up and singing about having “the lonesome apartment bluuues.” Undaunted,
Philbert writes a second letter and launches it toward Oliver, using a slingshot
made from a rubber band. But Oliver thinks the letter is a bug and starts
scratching himself, and he misses this missive, too. Then a bunch of Oliver’s
relatives show up to throw a party, and Philbert decides that if it is going to
be a tea party, he will attend, too.
No such luck! Philbert gets up his courage and carries a letter toward Oliver
to ask if he can join the party, but as Oliver offers the other cats tea,
things get chaotic: these cats just want to bounce and dance and make noise
until – oh no! – one of them bangs into Oliver, whose teacups fly off the tray
on which he is carrying them and break on the floor. “The party ends as quickly
as it began,” but now Oliver does not even have teacups anymore, and as he
cleans up the mess, he sheds a tear and says, “I’ll never have tea with anyone
now.” But Philbert finally comes over and hands Oliver the letter, and after
one more misunderstanding (Oliver first thinks the letter is a tissue, and
blows his nose in it), Philbert reveals that he was able to save two teacups by
putting a sofa pillow under them as they fell. “And the new friends sit down
for a nice cup of tea.” And cookies. And the start of what is sure to be a
beau-tea-ful friendship. The fact that Philbert is a mouse and Oliver is a cat
is barely relevant to the story – all that matters here is that the two have
tastes (specifically for tea and cookies) in common. That is a nice, subtle
message for Tea with Oliver to
deliver, and the pleasant tones of the ink-and-watercolor drawings make the
book a sweetly relaxing one. Adults reading it to children may want to sip a
cup of tea while doing so – and even offer a bit to the kids.
No comments:
Post a Comment