Inspector Flytrap approves. For that matter, so do Princess Labelmaker, Emperor Pickeltine, Origami Yoda and many others. Tom Angleberger is the author that lives in your child’s library. The Strange Case of Origami Yoda and its series is what your middle school student knows the best. That series of books has sold more than four million copies. The elementary school reader knows Inspector Flytrap and laughed along the way with this very enjoyable series. Now, from the pages of Inspector Flytrap comes Didi Dodo, Future Spy: Recipe for Disaster. This is the first in a three-book mini-series about a spy who is also a dodo and your first through fourth grade readers will love this book.
Our fourth grade student took the book from my office and
promptly misplaced it. Coincidentally, he lost it after he read it, so he was
able to tell me that it was great, very funny and much like Inspector Flytrap.
I asked him to go into detail about the book and all he could remember was that
it was about Didi Dodo and a stolen brownie recipe. “Oh, but you’ll love it”,
he reassured me.
Sure enough, after finding the book he was right. Didi Dodo, Future Spy: Recipe for Disaster is just the sort of book that kids in fist through fourth grade will love. Those on the younger side of that range will need to read it with someone older, but those third graders will be able to breeze through the book and enjoy every moment.
It has the same vibe as Inspector Flytrap and that’s because
Angleberger wanted this character to live in the same world as her erstwhile
bug eating friend. He’s creating his own elementary school, early chapter book
universe where they can cross over, ever so briefly for a cameo, guest spot or
assistance solving crimes. There is a little crossover in this book, but for
the most part it’s all Didi Dodo, plus Koko Dodo-who is a great baker, Cousin
Yuk Yuk, Penguini and a couple others.
The chapters in the book are short enough for struggling readers
to read one and feel accomplished. They’re also short enough for. The book is
also complimented with illustrations by Jared Chapman. Chapman has a way of
drawing characters that perfectly capture the chaos and mayhem that they’re
thinking. You’re looking for an angry yak that looks like Slim Pickens mixed
with a James Bond villain? No problem he’s in the book and provides horsepower
of energy to keep our future spy hero on the run towards success.
Didi Dodo: Future Spy, Recipe for Disaster is great. Kids will reread it a couple of times and then ask when the next one comes out. This is where you can recommend Inspector Flytrap if they’re in elementary school or age them up a bit for the Origami Yoda series. Either way they’ll have a hoot of a time while they wait for the next one.
I love pizza. However, after having eaten pizza for more than a couple of decades I’ve realized that while bad pizza is almost impossible, there certainly are varying degrees of its caliber or preference. Dragons Get Colds Too is a book about being sick, acknowledging that you’re sick and hopefully, respecting the caregiver who is assisting you. If this book were a pizza place then it’d be a pleasant enough place with OK tasting pie that fills you up, but isn’t one that you’d visit unless it wan on the way to where you’re going.
The premise of the Dragons Get Colds Too is certainly one that any parent can relate to. There’s a sick patient who isn’t being the best recipient of care that’s being offered to them. It’s a situation that is ripe for comedy and lessons that can hopefully be learned by younger readers.
The book is told in a step-by-step process where the girl is
being instructed by a doctor and their book on what to do for the dragon. The
issue for us, and our 7YO reader, is that the book felt stilted and lost its
rhythm every time the narrator and their book popped up on the page. In some
books the narrator moves the book along nicely, however, in this book it’s more
confusing and distracting than an asset to the story.
There are some humorous physical elements that the book brings up about caring for something as large as a dragon. They breathe fire, their neck is impossibly long and their snot is especially gooey. The illustrations are clever enough, everybody loves a dragon right? However, the book moves so slowly that few audiences, except for the dragon die hards and those looking for a children’s illustrated book about being sick will want a repeat reading.
It also has lots of white space on the pages. Granted this
is a pet peeve of ours, but I find that pages with more color tend to capture
and hold the attention of young readers more effectively. If you’re a fan of dragon
books, buying books for a doctor’s waiting room or for the kid’s renaissance
fair this book is for you, otherwise, it’s one that you’ll want to get from the
library.
A couple of years ago my wife and I went out for date night. It’s that mythical time where moms and dads leave the kids at home then out with other parents, get a drink and eat food with too much cheese. When we got home, part of our conversation led me to say, “the journey is the destination”. Mind you, this was years before I heard it used as a luxury car tagline. But, when I said it, my wife commented that it made sense, we weren’t headed to a big finale, rather; life is the little things that we do and encounter on the way. Secrets of Topsea, The Extremely High Tide! By Kir Fox and M. Shelley Coats is a book that fits that description.
This is the second book in the Secrets of Topsea series and
it solidifies the tone that the authors are going for. I’ll readily admit that
I didn’t get the first book in the series, A Friendly Town That’s Almost Always
by the Ocean. I thought it was slow, pointless, weird and rather aimless.
With The Extremely High Tide! I get it now-and so will any middle school readers who latch onto this series. As it wears its weirdness as a superhero cape you don’t really need to read the first book to understand what’s going on.
Talise is a fifth-grade student who knows a lot about the
ocean. She also has a pet sea blob and has a fear of rubber ducks. As the book
starts we see the class by the seaside. Not long after that Talise finds a
bottle with a note in it. The note has a drawing of a boat and Talise takes
that as an omen that she should build a boat.
This is where the ‘journey is the destination’ aspect factors in. The boat and the journey to build it seems like it’s a main plot point. However, the main thing that ties the characters together is friendship, albeit a friendship that’s painted across all manner of oddities. Parents will also enjoy this series because it manages to keep young reader’s attention without any potty humor. Granted, potty humor is more of a low elementary thing, I’m sure it’s just our upper elementary reader who can’t seem to squeeze it out of his system.
Another thing that the book does well is to balance the
interest between boys and girls. The main character is a girl, but it’s not set
against a Lilith Fair quilt. Girls will enjoy it more than boys, but not by
much. It’s odd and creative to where the overwhelming vibe of the book is
trippy, fun and silly-without being sophomoric.
The chapters are presented in a creative, unpredictable
fashion with some pages pushing the story forward. Other chapters are short
newspaper clippings or the cafeteria menu. In other words, it’s a format that
middle school readers will be immediately attracted to, because the journey is
the destination.
Sometimes I squeal when books arrive. I let out a small one when Crafty Llama arrived at the office. This is not a book that was on my radar. I knew nothing about it. Yet, when I saw the cover something about this children’s illustrated book seemed so warm and comforting it simply felt like something we already knew. And, to be clear, I don’t mean that in the sense of old and repetitious. This was more of a comfort food feeling, for example, a food that I eat when I need solace, like clam chowder on a cold winter day….in case you’re in the area.
Crafty Llama is by Mike Kerr with illustrations by Renata Liwska. Its subtitle is, A story about crafting, friendship and the very best gifts. The book starts with Llama walking home on a warm summer day. When she gets home she knows that there are legitimate things that need to be done around the house like laundry, vacuuming the fireplace, putting WD-40 on the doors or straightening up the garage. She knows those things need to be done, but she spies a massive ball of yarn, conveniently the same color as her…, so she starts sewing something. When Llama is not sure what to do she sews so that she can clear her mind.
Before long some of her forest friends show up. They each
bring their unique set of skills to help her. The turtle, elephant, wolf and
more all show up to add elements to whatever she’s sewing. Some animals provide
ideas on what she can craft. Everyone helps except for beaver, who’s not sure
how he can help so he chews on a tree so that he can clear his mind.
It’s a social afternoon with all of the animal friends
sharing, being silly and having fun. By
the time night rolls around Llama has knitted a very nice blanket, which she
promptly shares with one of her buck-toothed sleeping friends.
Crafty Llama is a slice of illustrated book heaven for crafty kids 4-8. The illustrations are soft, warm and will delight (and calm…) young readers as they drift off to sleep land. This is a great good-night book for those younger kids in this spectrum. It’s short enough to re-read more than one time a night, but also long enough to qualify as the “one book” that you’re reading after a long day.
Happy Conklin Jr. has aged. The first book in the series by Paul Noth, How To Sell Your Family to the Aliens was entertaining, quickly paced and a book that upper elementary aged and older could really enjoy. In How To Properly Dispose of Planet Earth Happy is 11 now and this book has gone all Empire Strikes Back on young readers. Granted, readers that young won’t know what that phrase means, but you older readers surely know that phrase exemplifies an entry into a book or movie series that exceeds the one that came before it.
How To Properly Dispose of Planet Earth jumps out of the
gate with a subtle nod to The Wizard of Oz, gives readers a quick refresher, or
introduction to Happy and his life. We see that he traveled across space through
a porthole in his sister’s compact, meet his wrestler-grandmother and learn
that he’s in class beside a cute girl who he wants to be lab partners
with. The later one being the most
difficult thing to conquer by far-and this is a kid who has been to alien
worlds, been treated like a king and more.
What makes this second book so much better for readers of any age, is that it’s more personal. The first book was good, but it was good in its weirdness. How To Properly Dispose of Planet Earth is immediately more relatable for anyone who reads it, especially those upper elementary through middle school readers. Instead of focusing on Happy’s family we get to see how Happy is when he’s at school trying to be normal.
However, even at school, where he’s normal, things get weird
and before long Happy’s sister appears. Not long after that, so does a black
hole, his beard grows again, they draw a mustache on a lizard, get trapped on
an alien world and they just might have to dispose of a certain planet called
Earth in the garbage.
As chaotic and scattered as that rough overview is, How to
Properly Dispose of Planet Earth is incredibly grounded. The struggles and
difficulties that a sixth grade student has in real life will be evident to
those who read this book. They’ll laugh to themselves throughout it and find
themselves wishing that every book that they read is this entertaining.
If you’re a fan of The Rock, back when he was a wrestler;
this book is the Rock Bottom for reluctant readers.
It’s the Kryptonite for reluctant readers whose superpower
is not enjoying books.
I also enjoyed the book as much as middle school will. Our
third grader is just a little too enjoy it. By this summer he will have read it
once and be on his way to re-reading it again. There are some illustrations on
some pages, but this strength of it is in its words. It’s incredibly fast paced
and is great for boys or girls who want something fun to read. Set against a
school backdrop with a science-fiction paintbrush this book will make you believe
that you really can travel to an alternate world through a tiny mirror. Of
course, as long as you have a lizard with you and a member or two of your
family is either chasing you-or there at the end to save you.
The day we received The World’s Best Jokes for Kids in the mail our 9 year-old wasn’t expecting much. Part of that was due to the fact that he, his younger brother and I were about to embark on an afternoon full of errands. For the next two hours, every time we got back in the car from the store he was regaling us with jokes from the book. When we got home he continued to read from the book until mom got home, then he reread his favorite jokes. Then mom was so tickled with laughter over how much he was enjoying it that we got his grandfather on the phone.
The World’s Best Jokes for Kids, Volume 1 and 2 by Swerling & Lazar are out and it’s the stuff of elementary school legend. If you’ve eaten lunch at an elementary school lately you’ll notice that many of the kids will try to throw you a joke curve ball. It’s a clever pun or simple joke that, if it were said by a dad it would be a dad joke and gotten eggs or rolling eyes directed at me. However, since they’re said by a kid who is under 10, it’s cute and down-right laugh out loudable.
This book has hundreds of those jokes, most of which I had
never heard before.
For example: Why can you never trust atoms?
Because they make up everything.
Each joke is accompanied by an illustration that helps drive
the joke home. That atom joke has a grinning atom with molecules rotating
around it. Granted our 7 year-old would not get that joke. However, his older brother got it and was
howling with laughter. We were grinning too.
Many of the jokes have that same borderline highbrow appeal to them. They’re puns that are smarter than what you see on a milk carton and this book will provide hours, upon hours of entertainment. For parents it’s also a great value because each book is only $6.99. The text is such that those in second grade and higher will be able to read them by themselves. This is fun stuff that will entertain kids on a rainy day, lazy summer afternoon or running errands around town.
Our 9 year-old has loved Bad Kitty for the past three years. It was Bad Kitty Scaredy-Cat and ever since then he’s been mental about reading about Uncle Murray, Bad Kitty and the other characters that revolve around their feline world. When he got Bad Kitty Kitten Trouble in the mail he ran to his room where I didn’t see him for 45 minutes. I did hear the occasional laugh, guffaw and more, but he was fully engrossed in Kitten Trouble.
Bad Kitty is one of those book series that really speaks to elementary school kids. Some of them are illustrated books of varying length while others have more of a graphic novel feel. Kitten Trouble is formatted like a graphic novel and immediately registered with our oldest. He was thrilled when he had the chance to as author Nick Bruel some questions about his books, kittens who don’t behave and a certain uncle that has more that we were led to believe. Here are the questions our 9 year-old asked Mr. Bruel about his latest book, Bad Kitty Kitten Trouble.
Q1. Why did you add
three more kittens?
A: I think one would
have been too few and 5 million might have been too many. Three seemed
like a nice concession between the two.
That was a sarcastic
response, wasn’t it. I’m sorry. Truth is, I’m not sure. I
think three is a common number for grouping characters. Think 3 Musketeers.
3 men in a tub. 3 pigs. 3 billy goats gruff. I think I was a
little more than a slave to convention when I decided to have three kittens
entering Kitty’s household.
Q2. What was your
motivation to write this book? (Technically…he asked”Why did you write
this book?” I just re-worded his question a bit…)
A: About two years ago,
while I was driving to pick up my daughter from school, I was listening to a
brief but uplifting report on the radio about a man named Luke Miller of Real
New York Tours who was similarly distressed by this overwhelming refugee crisis
and asked himself the simplest of questions: “What can I do to help?” His
answer was obvious. He owned a tourism agency! He could give free tours of the
city to newly arrived refugees, giving them the kind of welcome a new family in
unfamiliar surroundings could use. And that’s precisely what he did. I
was inspired. I decided to ask myself the same question. What could I do to
help? All I do is write and illustrate simple, heavily illustrated chapter
books about an ornery pussycat — Bad Kitty. Hang on… I write and illustrate
simple, heavily illustrated chapter books about an ornery pussycat! The answer
was obvious. I could use my platform as a children’s book author to create a
work that in some way gave a voice to child refugees. Plus, I could hopefully
counter the anti-refugee vitriol that was permeating the media more and more
every day. The story came to me in a flash, and I began putting it together
later the same day.
Q3. Why does one kitten
speak French?
A: I wanted to make all
of the kittens seem foreign in some way to Kitty, which is why they look so
different compared to her. But I also wanted to make all of the kittens
distinct from each other rather than make three kittens who looked exactly the
same. I think graphically it makes them more interesting. It
occurred to me to make one kitten look like a kitten version of Strange Kitty,
because he already looks so distinct from all of the other cats. If I was
going to have a Strange Kitten, then I would have to have her talk, and having
her speak another language seemed natural and in keeping with having the
kittens being foreign in origin. I chose French as the language not only
because I love the language but also because seeing small children speak French
is always particularly adorable.
Q4. Why does Bad Kitty
always look scared?
A: It’s interesting you
think that. I grow concerned that I have her look ornery or grumpy too
much. I will say that I think having her look scared or perplexed has
been a pattern on the covers over recent years.
Q5. Why does Bad Kitty
not share things?
A: This is my keeping
her in character as a cat. I’ve had multiple cats in the past, and most
cats simply do not share the things that are most precious to them. And
let’s be honest… a lot of kids can be like that. Grown ups, too.
This is frankly one of the themes to this book. We all share the same
planet, the same air, the same water, the same streets, the same hardships and
joys. But, we don’t always share the same point of view, which is all too
often the source of our discord despite how much we all have in common.
Kitty, by the end of this story, comes to recognize much of what I just
discussed here. I think she is at her finest when it comes to sharing on
the closing pages of this book.
Q6. What book are you
going to write next?
A: I just handed in all
of the pages for the next Bad Kitty chapter book, “BAD KITTY JOINS THE
TEAM”. It will be my Bad Kitty book on sports and exercise, and it
is exceptionally silly. Before that one comes out, there will be two
simple picture books coming out later this year: “BAD KITTY DOES NOT LIKE
THANKSGIVING” and “BAD KITTY: SEARCHING FOR SANTA”.
Q7. Are you an Uncle
Murray to someone?
A: Neat question.
I do not have any biological nieces, but I do have a “niece” who I’ve
known since the moment she was born. Literally. I was her mother’s
birth partner. She is about to turn 26 but she calls me “uncle”
because she knows she can turn to me for advice or assistance whenever she
wants. That, to me, is what defines an uncle the most. Uncle Murray
himself is scatter brained and easily confused, but he is undeniably reliable
and is often the moral center of my books.
Q8. Do you have a cat?
A: We have a fluffy,
gray cat named Rose. We named her “Rose” because she looks and
smells nothing like a rose.
Q9. Why do so many
people read Bad Kitty?
A: I think that depends
on the reader. I think some people like these books simply because it
features a cat, and they like cats. Some people like them because they
think they’re funny. Some people might like them because they’re
relatively simple to read compared to other books their size. I think
ultimately people read books they can relate to; they see something of
themselves or their reality in the story, whatever that might be. I am
thrilled that people read my books. Why, is entirely up to them.
Q10. What would you do to encourage students who are curious (or want to become an author/illustrator?
A: Be brave. That
might seem like a vague bit of advice, and maybe it is, but it’s also the best
advice I can give. If you want to write stories, you have to be brave
enough to take that step to sit down with pen and paper or in front of your computer
screen to write that story or make that drawing. But it doesn’t end
there, because if you want to do this professionally, then you have to be brave
enough to share your work. This is an extremely difficult step for some
people. If you want to write stories or paint pictures purely for
personal satisfaction, I think that is wonderful. But if you want to earn
a living doing so, then you have to push back that nagging fear of judgment or
criticism and share your work with those around you regardless of the outcome.
Not everyone is going to love the work you create, but that’s okay.
You’re creating your work to satisfy your own love, not others. Be brave.
Q11. What’s one of the best experiences that you’ve had in touring schools or book stores and meeting fans of the books?
A: I’m proud to say that
I was only the 12th author in the history of the Make-A-Wish Foundation to be
the wish. Several years ago, a young man with numerous, non-life
threatening ailments wished to meet me and talk to me about my Bad Kitty books.
I arranged to have him and his family fly to New York City so we could all meet
inside the offices of my publisher. We then sat and plotted out a short
story about Kitty based on his idea. He wrote the story to “Bad
Kitty Goes To Camp” and I made the illustrations. When we were done,
I gave him the book we created to keep. Afterwards, we toured lower
Manhattan together until it was time to part.