PreS-Gr 3—Gravett's latest experiment with metafiction imagines the possible trajectory of a child's appeal to hear a bedtime story ad infinitum. Here, the characters are dragons. The mother begins energetically: "Cedric the dragon's a bright angry red./He's never,/His whole life,/(Not once) been to bed." This nocturnal picture-book beast terrorizes princesses and trolls. In the second reading, a sleepy mom takes a more judgmental tone, and the hero is hospitable. By the fourth version, she and the storybook characters are snoring; "z's" fall from the printed page. Meanwhile, the listening Cedric has undergone a color and personality transformation. White and placid on the endpapers and green during the beginning (in contrast to his angry, red textual counterpart), he and his dopplegänger gradually reverse colors. While the titular refrain appears throughout (including on two subtly different title pages), the repeated word is part of a full-blown temper tantrum at the conclusion. The book is shaken and turned upside down, causing the composition to tumble to the edge. Steaming mad, the protagonist burns a hole in the page (and the back cover) through which the characters escape. Gravett differentiates the story lines of her oil-based pencil and watercolor compositions by using a brighter palette and more detailed features against the white background of her main narrative and deeper shades and parchment-colored pages in the book Cedric loves. Youngsters will delight in deciphering the visual narrative in their own multiple readings and will relate to the range of emotions displayed by their scaly stand-in.—
Wendy Lukehart, District of Columbia Public LibraryGravett, whose stories often include surprising die cuts and satisfying metafictive elements, takes the I-don't-want-to-go-to-sleep trope to a new, fiery level. The book begins on the front endpapers with a little dragon starting its bedtime routine. On the second title-page spread (yes, there are two), readers get the feeling that things are not what they appear when the dragon, clutching a book, winks at them. The creature snuggles in to hear the book -- a tale of a dragon named Cedric who has "never, / His whole life, / (Not once) been to bed." Uh-oh. After the reading, our little green dragon sweetly makes the request most small folks do when faced with bedtime: "Again?" The dragon parent, completely draggin', reads the story again, but abridges it. This causes the book's illustrations to shift, as does the appearance of the increasingly impatient little dragon (e.g., as the story changes and the parent's eyes droop, the creature takes on an angry red hue). Soon the little one turns fully red, screams to have the book read again, and, in a raucous burst of flames, breathes a (die-cut) hole into the end of the book. Though it's hard to think that human child readers will want to sleep after this abrupt yet satisfying ending, it is clear that they will be screaming "AGAIN!" robin l. smith
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