Good Night, Sweetie. By Joyce
Wan. Cartwheel Books/Scholastic. $6.99.
Monsters Unleashed No. 1. By
John Kloepfer. Illustrated by Mark Oliver. Harper. $16.99.
Adults do not always realize
just how wide the scope of children’s books is – with ones for certain age
groups being so different from those for other ages that it sometimes seems as
if very young and not-so-young children are different species, at least from
the viewpoint of publishers. The youngest kids get the sweetest material by
far, and authors such as Joyce Wan are adept at providing it. Good Night, Sweetie is a warm, cute board
book with a cover featuring a sleepy moon atop a cloud and eyes-closed stars in
the background. Wan specializes in board books that come across as highly
personalized through the frequent use of “we,” “my” and “you,” as in a recent
one from her called You Are My Cupcake.
This makes it simple for parents to read the easy-to-follow words with warmth
and expressiveness. So Good Night,
Sweetie, starts with “You are my wish upon a STAR,” showing a happily
smiling (and pink-cheeked) shooting star trailing a rainbow, and continues with
“My bright, shining MOON from afar,” with a red-cheeked crescent moon smiling
above a house whose chimney emits heart-shaped puffs of smoke. It is easy to
dismiss this material as cloying, but that misses the point: for the very
youngest children, from birth to age three or four, books such as Good Night, Sweetie are deeply
reassuring and really can make the potentially frightening experience of
unconsciousness – that is, sleep – much easier to handle. The cutest notion
here describes the child to whom the book is being read as “My cozy, dozy
bedtime BOOK,” a sort of “meta” approach to this book itself: here the
illustration features a smiling book from whose pages eyes-closed stars and
hearts are popping out, along with a sleeping moon wearing an old-fashioned
nightcap. Everything in Good Night, Sweetie
is plush-looking, warm-seeming and relaxing – the illustrations here being an
alternative to the approach of using gently rhyming text to lull a young child
to sleep (as was done famously in Good
Night, Moon and is also tried in innumerable other bedtime books). Wan’s
book is short, simple and strongly focused on its purpose, and in the event
that a young child is not asleep by the time it ends and says “again,” it is
quite easy to re-read as needed, re-showing each of the relaxing illustrations
to produce the intended feeling of deep relaxation and comfort.
Fast-forward a few years to
a time when kids are very much reading on their own and are well past the stage
of “baby books” such as board books – and you discover a huge number of familiarly
plotted adventures stories for preteens, featuring groups of kids (largely
indistinguishable from each other) who band together to deal with issues that
are much simpler and more straightforward to handle than the problems and
difficulties of everyday real life (which mostly show up in books for even
older readers: teenagers). One of the virtuoso producers of formulaic (+++) preteen
fantasy/adventure books is John Kloepfer, who has now started a new series
(amply illustrated by Mark Oliver) called Monsters
Unleashed. The first thing to do in sequences like this one is to assemble
the team, making sure there are a few nods to differing appearances and ethnic
backgrounds. The protagonist here is sixth-grader Freddie Liddle, who is the
opposite of his name, being big (six-feet-four-inches tall) and rather klutzy.
The child of divorced parents, he has moved to New Mexico and found only one
friend, a small Hispanic boy named Manny Vasquez. The three other members of
the “inner circle” here start out as Freddie’s enemies: they are bullies – a
jock and jerk named Jordan, an “evil mega-nerd” named Quincy, and a black
wannabe actress named Nina. Trying to handle his feelings about his tormentors,
Freddie draws three monsters based on them, and then, with Manny’s help, uses a
3-D printer to make actual physical versions of the creatures – called Kraydon,
Mega-Q and Yapzilla. But there is something mysterious and magical about this
particular printer (never explained; why bother?), and the monsters it makes
come to life – and start growing enormously as soon as they come in contact
with water. Soon enough, mayhem ensues throughout the school, where as usual
the adults are oblivious and/or clueless and/or invisible. To control the
monsters, Freddie realizes, he has to understand how they think, and since they are modeled on Jordan, Quincy and Nina, he
has to enlist the three bullies in the anti-monster fight. And that is how
Kloepfer sets up the five-person anti-monster team that battles the baddies in Monsters Unleashed while the kids bond
among themselves, all thoughts of bullying forgotten except for a brief
reference here and there to the way things were before they all got together
and found a common cause. Monsters
Unleashed is unbelievable, silly and funny enough to keep preteens
interested if they enjoy mindless fantasy adventures whose endings are a
foregone conclusion: of course the kids will rescue the town and make sure that
the monsters are returned to a harmless state. This means the creatures end up
shrunken to adorable size and are ready to take on the onslaught of insects
promised for the second book in the series, Bugging
Out. Fast to read, formulaic and forgettable, Monsters Unleashed is a fine example of book creation for the
preteen “species,” which indeed, on the basis of books like this, seems to be
very little like the cuddly early-childhood type of human.
No comments:
Post a Comment