Busy
Betty & the Perfect Christmas Present. By Reese Witherspoon. Illustrated by Xindi Yan. Flamingo Books.
$19.99.
Ah, the joys and stresses of gift-giving. Busy Betty feels them more
intensely than other kids ages 3-7 do, since she feels everything more intensely, which is what makes her so endearing
even though she is so often over-the-top. OK, always over-the-top. Of course, Christmas gift-giving can be
somewhat over-the-top itself, so a Busy Betty book with a Christmas focus makes
perfect seasonal sense. And Reese Witherspoon’s tale-telling, matched with
Xindi Yan’s exuberant illustrations, proves more than equal to the mixture of
mischievous and heartwarming activities that defines all three (so far) Busy Betty
books.
This third one has Betty bustling about with her usual enthusiasm (ok,
overenthusiasm) in her determination to come up with the absolutely perfect
gift for everybody in her family, including the often-put-upon dog, Frank.
Reacting to her father’s cliché about making lemonade when life gives you
lemons (Betty has just realized she has no money and so can’t buy gifts), Betty
remembers her summertime lemonade stand and thinks she can use it again, until
spoilsport older brother Bo points out that it’s too cold and snowy for anyone
to wander around looking for lemonade. So Betty, never slow to pivot to
something new, decides to keep the “stand” idea but turn it into something
Christmasy – by selling cookies. Then it turns out that everyone in the family
suggests a different type of cookie,
but that’s fine as long as Betty and best friend Mae can make them all with
tons and tons of sprinkles.
Which they promptly toss all around the house, as shown on a page where
there are so many sprinkles that at one point Mae has to sit under an umbrella
to ward off the sprinkle flood being dumped by Betty (ok, how is this ok, even in an over-the-top way?).
Well, Betty and Mae, clearly unpunished and apparently without doing any
cleanup, quickly redecorate their lemonade stand and turn it into a
Christmas-cookie stand, which promptly attracts absolutely nobody since the
weather is too cold and windy and snowy for people to be out-and-about. So
Betty concludes that the way to get customers is to make it seem they already
have them, and she and Mae promptly create a whole batch of snowpeople, most of
them larger than the girls themselves (ok, those are adult snowpeople). They even make a snowdog (on which Frank
promptly relieves himself, in one of the book’s funniest illustrations).
Frank soon looms large (especially for such a small dog) in the story:
first, Betty and Mae sing a Christmas carol whose lyrics they do not quite
remember – the first line comes out “Frankie the wet-nosed doggy.” And then
Frank, whose has been uncomfortable wearing the antlers that Betty has put on
him, manages to get those projections entangled in the cookie-stand
decorations, which leads to a predictably disastrous (ok, and predictably
hilarious) mess after the stand topples, all the cookies fly everywhere, and
only Frank, happily gobbling them up from the snow, is satisfied.
But it turns out there is one cookie left on display, and just then Bo happens by and grabs it, and that gives Betty the solution to her Christmas-gift dilemma: she makes cookies for the family rather than for sale, modifying them so each person gets the type of cookie for which he or she expressed a preference earlier in the story. Problem solved! Presents “straight from my heart” suitably delivered! Even Frank gets a bone-shaped treat (ok, presumably a made-for-pups dog biscuit rather than one of Betty’s cookies). And the only thing parents need be concerned about after all the warmth and amusement of Busy Betty & the Perfect Christmas Present is what to do when real-world kids, determined to enjoy the holiday just as much as Betty does, decide that they are going to scatter bottles and jars and other containers of sprinkles all around the house without any consequences whatsoever except being considered adorable (ok, adults: resolution of that issue is up to you).
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