Pignic. By Matt Phelan. Greenwillow/HarperCollins. $17.99.
Penguin & Tiny Shrimp Don’t Do Bedtime! By Cate Berry. Pictures by
Charles Santoso. Balzer+Bray/HarperCollins. $17.99.
Wonderful watercolor illustrations are the
biggest immediate attraction of Matt Phelan’s Pignic, a sweet and simple story of a seven-pig family heading
outdoors for a sweet and simple summertime ritual – complete with picnic basket
and kite. On closer inspection, though, there is more to Pignic, which gently calls up the sorts of stories and
circumstances that very young readers and pre-readers will likely already know
about pigs. At the story’s start, for instance, all the pigs are sauntering
across a meadow toward a suitable picnic place, but on the far left – in a
strongly contrasting blue color – there is a wolf. Uh-oh! And then, when the
pigs reach a suitable spot, complete with a tree to climb, one piglet simply
can’t get up into even the lowest branch. Uh-oh again! But things work out
quickly and happily here. A very large passing tortoise kindly allows the small
piglet to stand on top of his shell, giving him enough of a boost so he can
reach the lowest tree branch. And what about the wolf? He seems to be sneaking
up on two piglets who are about to fly a kite, but what actually happens is
that there is no wind to get the kite airborne, so one little pig gestures from
the wolf to the kite, clearly asking for some help, and sure enough, the wolf gives
a big huff and a big puff and the kite soars into the air: “Hooray!” In fact,
any and all adversity on this lovely day turns out to be only temporary: just
as the pig parents lay out all the “p” foods they have brought – pretzels,
pies, pickles and plums – dark clouds suddenly appear and there is a huge
downpour. Uh-oh! Well, actually not
uh-oh, since these are, after all, pigs, and pigs like nothing more than to
wallow in mud, of which there is now an abundance. So the pig family members
are all smiles as they slosh and splash around, eventually ending up completely
covered in muck and heading home to the words, “What a perfect day for a
pignic.” Yes, perfect indeed.
One piglet is already asleep on the papa
pig’s shoulders as the pigs of Pignic
approach their house, but sleep is the farthest thing from the mind and
interest of Penguin and Tiny Shrimp in Cate Berry’s Penguin & Tiny Shrimp Don’t Do Bedtime! These two characters
are not going to go to bed: “We don’t
do bedtime!” says Tiny Shrimp very directly. The two friends spend some time
explaining what will not be in the
book: no toothbrushing, no bath time, no soft beds, no squishy pillows, no
sheep to count, no stars on which to wish. So what is in the book? Glad you asked! “This book has fireworks!” yells
Penguin, as bright colors explode all around. “And running through the
Serengeti!” he says, as a lion chases Penguin, one of the sheep, and Tiny
Shrimp (who is wearing four sneakers). And there is much more, such as “sailing
in shark-infested waters,” which seems to alarm even the lion, who has joined
the no-bedtime parade. There are songs here, the characters explain, and silly
jokes, and even “a Uni-Hippo,” which is, yes, a hippopotamus sporting a single
unicorn horn right in the middle of its skull. “One thing this book will never
do is make you tired,” exclaims Penguin, by this time surrounded by lots of animals and characters from the
various scenes, including an octopus, guitar-playing dog, smiling star,
accordion-wielding cat, and of course the Uni-Hippo. “This book will never make
you yawn,” continues Penguin, stifling a, um, yawn – while Tiny Shrimp finds
himself yawning also. In fact, suddenly all
the characters are yawning, even the star. And despite Penguin’s flat-out
statement that “my eyelids aren’t heavy at all,” one eye is soon half-closed,
and most of the other characters are flopping down together in a big heap of
sleepiness – and then dozing off. And at that point, Penguin and Tiny Shrimp
climb into bed and are immediately fast asleep as well, leaving the very tired
Uni-Hippo to have the last word: “This book will see you in the morning.” A
bedtime book with a difference, and a very amusing one both in the writing and
in Charles Santoso’s delightfully daffy illustrations, this tale of Penguin and
Tiny Shrimp is a neat way to reflect young readers’ own determination not to go to sleep until their bodies
simply give out and they have no choice but to “do bedtime.”
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