PreS-Gr 2—A compelling, engaging, and original wordless graphic novel for young children in which readers can determine the hero. The three perspectives of the different title characters are delivered concurrently in three by three cells, each third adding new details to the same story. The drama unfolds as the bird flies out the window after escaping its cage, the cat wakes up up from a nap eager for excitement, and the dog stands guard, master of his domain, the yard. The tale accelerates as each story line advances independently from one another, with color-coded panels helpfully delineating each point of view. Kids will have fun tying the separate threads together. The wordless graphic novel format will empower young and struggling readers, while giving them the opportunity to claim ownership of the narrative. The quirky digital art adds humor to this effective and imaginative title. A must-own for elementary school libraries.—
John Trischitti, Midland County Public Libraries, TXIn this innovative and accessible wordless picture book, three pets escape the ennui of domestication for brief, interconnected adventures in the wild. Read across the cartoon panels for the protagonists' parallel plot lines--the bird in the top row; the tabby in the middle row; and the guard dog in the bottom row--or read from top to bottom to "get the whole story."
In this innovative wordless picture book told entirely through cartoon panels, three pets escape the ennui of domestication for brief, interconnected adventures in the wild. An introduction explains that readers may read across the six-by-three distribution of rectangular panels for the protagonists' parallel plot lines -- the Tweety-like yellow bird in the blue-saturated top row of panels; the orange tabby in the green-toned middle row; and the bluish-gray guard dog in the yellow-hued bottom row -- or read from top to bottom to "get the whole story." Expressive, accessible art wordlessly follows the pets' adventures, during which each animal not only interacts (badly) with the other two pets but also comes snout-to-snout (or beak-to-beak) with a wild version of itself: a hawk, a lynx, a wolf. While the consistent panel grid sacrifices the more dynamic layout and pacing afforded by a variety of panel sizes and shapes, this structure (with its protagonist-color-complementing rows) unobtrusively guides readers along. And it's that much more effective when that structure breaks into a dizzying and hilarious double-page spread of all six creatures in a high-speed chase through the pets' backyard, a bemused squirrel looking on. Once they have chased off the interlopers, the triumphant pets settle down for well-deserved naps on their well-defended home turf. katie bircher
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