Lerner and Goldhor, the sisters behind What's So Terrible About Swallowing an Apple Seed?
reunite for a well-trod tale of a girl who marches to her own Continue reading »
In this sassy creation myth that tweaks the first chapter of Genesis, Big Momma "roll[s] up her sleeves" and gets down to business ("Wasn't easy, either, with that little baby Continue reading »
"An Alice accessible to all ages," wrote PW
in a starred review. "The villains here are more stoogelike than menacing, and the volume brims with Continue reading »
Candlewick teams with British sister company Walker Books for this adaptation of Waddell's popular picture book. A reading of the full text kicks off a program jam-packed with extras. Oddie Continue reading »
No matter the day and age of parenting, one theme that transcends time is a child’s rush to grow up. In this evergreen tale, first published by Krauss in 1947, a boy is eager to keep up with Continue reading »
Put two titans of kids' books together for the first time, and what do you get (besides the urge to shout, “What took you so long?”)? The answer: an instant classic. Fox's Continue reading »
On the heels of the pairing of Mem Fox and Oxenbury in Ten Little Fingers and Ten Little Toes, here's another dream-come-true matchup: Oxenbury and her husband. A little boy has learned that a Continue reading »
A father and his four children--a toddler, a preschool boy and two older girls--go on the traditional bear hunt based on the old camp chant: ``We're going to catch a big one. / What a beautiful day! Continue reading »
A talented team ingeniously up-ends the classic tale of the three little pigs, and the laugh-out-loud results begin with the opening illustration--a mother wolf lounges in bed, her hair in curlers Continue reading »
A poor duck is overworked by a lazy farmer--until the duck's farm friends mete out their own brand of barnyard justice. ""Young readers will flap for joy right along with the endearing web-footed Continue reading »
ISBN 0-689-81528-X. PW's starred review applauded the ""laugh-out-loud results"" of this talented team's clever interpretation, calling it ""among the wittiest fractured fairy tales around."" Ages Continue reading »
Martin Waddell and Helen Oxenbury work their storytelling magic in Farmer Duck. A duck does all the work for a lazy farmer until a rebellion by the other barnyard animals sets them all free. ""By Continue reading »
A baby boy is showered with love from his relatives as the clan gathers for a celebration in this exuberant picture book. The baby waits at the window with Mom, not ``doing anything... nothing Continue reading »
Lighthearted poems by such contributors as Rose Fyleman, Vachel Lindsay and the ubiquitous Anon. are illustrated in Oxenbury's signature sunny artwork. Ages 3-7. Continue reading »
A baby boy is showered with love during a family party. ""In this exuberant picture book.... Vibrant gouache paintings capture all the warmth of this close-knit group,"" said PW in a starred review. Continue reading »
Oxenbury brings her considerable talents to bear on this slender but winsome picture book. ``It's my birthday and I'm going to make a cake,'' announces a child, and one by one a host of animal Continue reading »
One by one a host of animals offer ingredients when a child decides to bake a birthday cake. PW called the story ""perfectly paced"" and said that the ""understated"" watercolors ""shine with the Continue reading »
If Zwerger's Alice (reviewed above) is deliciously cryptic, Oxenbury's (Tom and Pippo books) brims with the fun and frights of a visit to an amusement park. In perhaps her most ambitious work to Continue reading »
A quartet of board books-I Touch; I See; I Can; and I Hear-unite for one oversize volume: Helen Oxenbury's Big Baby Book. Each page divides into a trio of panels, in which the baby explores the Continue reading »
The Three Little Wolves and the Big Bad Pig: A Pop-Up Storybook with a Twist in the Tale!
Eugene Trivizas
Familiar characters and stories return in new editions. Well suited to a 3-D adventure, The Three Little Wolves and the Big Bad Pig: Pop-up Edition by Eugene Trivizas, illus. by Helen Oxenbury, Continue reading »
Fort making is one of the great enterprises of childhood, but just in case the art has been lost to some, Bently (The Great Dog Bottom Swap) and Oxenbury (There's Going to Be a Baby) open their Continue reading »
Skittish, curious, loving, and vividly adorable, Henry’s new puppy, Charley, epitomizes the idea that while being a fledging pet owner isn’t always easy, it’s entirely worthwhile. Charley is a bit Continue reading »
Having gotten to know each other in Charley’s First Night (2012), Henry and his dog Charley are now thick as thieves. But Henry’s grandfather is visiting, and he has “never been friends with a dog Continue reading »
Playing in their yard on the edge of a forest, Alice and her younger brother, Jack, hear a strange noise wafting from the woods: “Ocka by hay beees unna da reeees.” Jack is certain that it’s the Continue reading »
Some unseen ghoul or monster is occupying Rabbit’s burrow. “I’m the Giant Jumperee,” it announces from inside, “and I’m scary as can be!” Rabbit’s pals each offer to rout the villain, but Continue reading »
Alderson's (The Swan's Stories) retelling of a traditional English tale is seasoned with casual, homespun phrases from its opening page: ""Once, a good time ago, there was an old farmer. He lived in Continue reading »
Clare, the undead fox of Deadwood Forest, is cast as a monster by the local children who gather each Halloween around the forest’s edge to chant about how he “waits to feast/ On Continue reading »
Poet and educator Keith (How the Boogeyman Became a Poet) delivers a poignant, hip-hop-fueled collection of poetry that’s equal parts memoir, love letter, and rallying cry to Continue reading »
Sixteen-year-old Sabel is puzzled by tonight’s family meal, which seems to be a special spread of her and her four siblings’ favorite foods. Sickness and savagery have toppled Continue reading »
Willis Hudson movingly exalts the power of African American spirituals in a lyrics showcase that pairs existing verses with feelings they can evoke. On the first page, a Black Continue reading »