The sublime simplicity of Can You Catch Me? Tutu and the Vehicles is disarming, immediate and resistance is futile. Tutu is a cute cat with disproportionally big eyes and is dressed like a ninja. The first page starts with a taunt of someone telling Tutu that they can’t catch them, as a black tail wisps away. Then we see Tutu jump on all manner of vehicles as they venture through a setting and onto or into a moving object in gentle pursuit of the black thing. Can You Catch Me? has the timeless graphics that today’s crawlers will find just as interesting as those ages will in 50 years.
Author: Daddy Mojo
Above the Trenches, a graphic novel that edutains with ease from all angles
Having taught a couple of classes to middle school grades about World War I, I know that the subject can be confusing. The time spent on WWI for most middle school classes is very brief, with more time allowed for the Treaty of Versailles, especially for those lower grades. Those ages know about the mythos of the flying ace, even if they get hazy on who were the Allied Forces and what were the causes that led to it. Above the Trenches is a graphic novel in the Nathan Tale’s Hazardous Tales series. This entry is specifically about the flying aces that took to the skies in WWI and how they came to shape this new form of combat. Ironically, the most famous WWI pilot, the Red Baron doesn’t factor into Above the Trenches that much. Instead, the graphic novel is about the Allied Powers and their build-up of the foreign legion and the men who jumped into this relatively new mode of transportation.
a Graphic novel with brains, funs and airborne gunsThe Sinister Secrets of Singe stumbles shortly out of the gate
The premise, as well as the hook in The Sinister Secrets of Singe, is very difficult to resist. There is a house that continues to grow, it literally gets larger and larger every night. There’s an 11-year-old kid, Noah, who lives there with his mother and their robot, who is size-wise the same age and stature as him. Noah’s job is to build things for the nearby city of Liberty, which he’s not allowed to visit. His mother keeps him under lock and key, under the watchful eye of Elijah, the robot. There’s so much to potentially love about The Sinister Secrets of Singe that it makes the fact that it didn’t pull it all together all the more frustrating.
Here’s hoping that the next one is betterAre You Big? is picture book laughs for ages three through seven
Elementary school-aged kids know Mo. Mo Willems’ picture books have a way of gleefully speaking to those young students. His style is immediate and can make them smile as they relax, make them think just a little bit, or it can do both. Are you Big? is Mo Willems at his thinking and relaxing best. At its smartest it’s a book about relative proportionality and thinking about the bigger picture that might contain variables that are outside of your influence. As its happiest and simplest, it’s a silly book with anthropomorphic weather systems, land masses and planets cavorting about a picture book that will do what books like this should do, make em smile.
A picture book that makes em smile….and think…and laugh…Quest Kids and the Dark Prophecy of Doug doesn’t disappoint
An entertaining first book does not automatically ensure a series. Quest Kids and the Dragon Pants of Gold was a great book that sure looked like it had legs. Quest Kids and the Dark Prophecy of Doug is mglit that runs with fun. It’s a book that lives somewhere between the graphic novel and chapter book world that incorporates the illustrated manic fun of the former while building upon the text-based latter that kids need to know.
This Little Engineer: A Think-and-do-Primer, board book to cerebral action
There is an entire world of board books out there. Some board books teach the very basics. The common denominator is that they all feature soft, pleasing illustrations that crawlers and pre-k students enjoy. This Little Engineer: A Think-and-do-Primer is a board book that ages three through six will identify with. It’s part of the board books that spotlight certain professions or characteristics in the This Little book series from Little Simon. The book also does a great job of identifying a very challenging aspect of something that most children question, but rarely get a great answer to.
The Bellwoods Game, spooky, age-OK scary for mid-elementary and up
The heel is what drives the narrative. It’s why you watch wrestling and a stronger heel will always make a book worth reading. The heel, or bad guy, can make a decent book highly enjoyable or transform a movie that’s just ok to one that is a waste of your time. The Bellwoods Game lays down the heel in short order and does so in a way that any kid who’s ever grown up in any neighborhood will relate to. It will bring back memories of their childhood in an upper-elementary, mglit package that delivers the chills without skimping on the relationships.
Bunny Vs. Monkey, lays the ground for elementary graphic novel gold
Spy Vs. Spy was my jam growing up. Even when I was well past an emerging reader status, the simplicity of their wordless adventures, combined with the humor that I wanted Mad Magazine was the stuff of legend. Bunny Vs. Monkey offers up some of those same feelings but is collected in an elementary school package that’s shorter, more colorful and a graphic novel. Many people will compare Bunny Vs. Monkey to Dog Man, which is accurate to a point, but the latter has one has more of a staccato presentation which is well-suited to its young audience.