Five Little Monkeys Shopping for School. By Eileen Christelow.
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $7.99.
First Grade Dropout. By Audrey Vernick.
Illustrated by Matthew Cordell. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $7.99.
Sheep Go to Sleep. By Nancy Shaw. Illustrated
by Margot Apple. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $7.99.
Some kids’ books retain their sense of
delight year after year and edition after edition – inviting their periodic
reissue in new formats and sometimes even with new titles. Five Little Monkeys Shopping for School, now available as a board
book, was originally published as Five
Little Monkeys Go Shopping in 2007. And Eileen Christelow’s
department-store counting tale, with or without the “school” element in the
title, remains both an amusing story and a very unusual counting book.
Christelow does not simply go up through numbers one through five or one
through 10, then back down again. She uses the occasion of a trip to a
department store (a place that many of today’s young children may never have
visited, so some explanation may be required) to show how addition and
subtraction work – without ever using the word “addition” or “subtraction,”
and without ever implying that any sort of lesson is being taught in the story.
In fact, the tale is amusing enough to stand on its own, since it is about
trying to keep a somewhat unruly group of kids…err, monkeys…in order and
focused on the task of buying what they need for the new school year. The
confusion starts as soon as Mama marches her five little monkeys into the
children’s department: “‘I only see four little monkeys,’ says the saleslady.”
And the next page shows Mama’s thoughts as a subtraction problem, as she thinks
that five little monkeys originally minus four little monkeys present means
there is one missing monkey. She has to search, and off she goes, telling the
four to try on clothes “AND DON’T GO WANDERING OFF!” Good idea, maybe, but two
of the little monkeys are so thirsty that they just have to find a water fountain. So by the time Mama returns with her
missing monkey, the saleslady sees only three
monkeys, and Mama is thinking that she started with five, there are only three
here, so now she has two missing. Off she goes again, again warning the little
monkeys to stay put, but this time one little monkey really, really needs a
bathroom. And at the same time he heads out, three friends of the little
monkeys show up, and now things really get confused when Mama returns with the
two water-fountain monkeys: now there are seven
little monkeys in the children’s department, and Mama has to do a subtraction
problem that includes the seven little monkeys minus the four of her little monkeys, meaning she is still
missing one! Young readers will find all this highly amusing, since Christelow
makes sure they understand just what is going on, no matter how confused Mama
may be. Unfortunately for Mama but fortunately for the story, all seven little
monkeys in the children’s department get tired of trying on clothes and decide
to go help Mama look for the missing monkey. Mama finds that one – and the
monkey friends’ papa shows up with two sister monkeys – and now there should be
10 monkeys. But of course there are only three, since the other seven are off
somewhere trying to help. The saleslady tries to solve the problem by making an
announcement over the store’s loudspeaker system (which, again, parents may
have to explain to today’s young children) – but so many little monkeys show up
in response to being called that now there are 14 little monkeys. All is eventually settled, though, when the
grandma of the extra four little monkeys claims them, and everybody finishes
shopping and heads home – except that one friend of the five little monkeys
asks to come play at their house, and they say that will be fine, so as Mama
drives away, she discovers that she now has six
little monkeys in the car. This is one of the cutest and silliest books in
Christelow’s cute-and-silly series, and this new board-book edition should
captivate plenty of kids who were not yet born when the original version was
published.
School is approached from an entirely
different angle in First Grade Dropout,
originally published in 2015 and now available in paperback. Audrey Vernick’s
story deals with embarrassment, laughter, humiliation in front of peers, and
eventual forgiveness. It is about a first-grader who said something so
completely unforgivable that everybody laughed at him and he cannot possibly
return to school, ever: he called his teacher “Mommy” when answering a
question. Matthew Cordell’s marvelous illustrations perfectly capture
everything from the moment of trauma to the ways the boy tries to cope, such
as: “Maybe I’ll just put on glasses and change my hair and pretend to be a new
kid from London. Or France. Or Cincinnati.” The three parallel changed
appearances are delightful. So is the two-page spread of “a big marching band
of laughing people” who all have hats with the word “Mommy” on them. So, in
fact, are all the pictures, which help propel the story as the boy nurses his
resentment of his classmates and tries to cope with his own feeling of having
made an unforgivable mistake. Glumly, he goes to play soccer, where he runs
into his best friend, Tyler – whose laughter at the “Mommy” mistake hurt most
of all. But Tyler does not bring up what happened, and when the boy says he is
dropping out of school, Tyler says he will do the same because then the two of
them can “work on our junk shots.” He says what?
Now it is the boy who has heard something to laugh at, but he does not want to
laugh, because he is better than all
the people who laughed at him. But he
just cannot help himself, and when he tells Tyler the term is jump shot, he sees that Tyler is just as
embarrassed as the boy was when he said “Mommy.” But then Tyler laughs, and
then the boy laughs, and the two reaffirm their friendship, forgive each other
for laughing and for being unintentionally silly, and everything ends happily
as the boy makes fun of himself by deliberately
referring to their teacher as “Mommy.” Like Christelow’s
addition-and-subtraction book that sneaks the learning in, Vernick’s
friendship-and-forgiveness story (thanks in large part to Cordell’s pictures)
gets its message across in a pleasantly understated way – and the lesson is one
that is as apt now as it was when the book first appeared in print.
There is no particular lesson in Sheep Go to Sleep, but this 2015 entry
in the long-running Nancy Shaw/Margot Apple series about five sheep’s everyday
adventures—now available as a paperback – is another book that retains its
charm and sense of fun. This is a sort-of-counting book, since the sheep go to
sleep one by one, but in this case the counting is not the point: this is better
as a bedtime tale than as a story about numbers. The tale, as usual, is simple,
and, also as usual, is told amusingly in rhyme. The five sheep “hit the hay”
(literally, in their case) but find they cannot sleep because nighttime is just
too noisy: “Screeches! Rustling! Noisy crickets!/ Sheep hear hoots from nearby
thickets.” To the rescue comes “a trusty collie” who manages to help the sheep
sleep, one at a time. One wants a hug, one needs a drink, one falls asleep to a
doggie lullaby, and so on. The recurrent refrain here does include numbers:
“Two asleep! How many more?” (Or one, or three, or four asleep...) But, again,
this is not really a counting book – it is at heart a book about helping
friends: the collie lends one sheep his own teddy bear and finds a quilt to
cover the last of the five. By then the collie has “a weary grin” of his own,
and at the end of the book, after a very funny illustration showing the sheep
dreaming of themselves, the dog and the borrowed teddy bear flying, the collie
wanders away – but not too far away – and himself goes to sleep beneath a
haystack. That is the whole book: five sheep and one dog bed down for the
night. But as always in this series, the charm and gentle amusement, even more
than the well-told story with its well-matched illustrations, are the main
attractions of the tale – and that is as true now as it was at the book’s
initial publication.
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