PreS-Gr 1—In this Swedish import, Pom and his stuffed companion Pim (a potato with arms and legs, perhaps?) have a day that goes from good luck to bad and repeats until good luck is the end result. A sunny day—good luck; falling—bad luck; finding cash on the ground and buying an ice cream—good luck; getting a tummy ache and having to lay down—bad luck; finding a random balloon above your bed (where the heck did that balloon come from?)—good luck, and so on. The story follows the pattern found in Jeff Mack's
Good News Bad News (2012) and
Ah Ha (2013, both Chronicle), Remy Charlip's
Fortunately (S. & S., 1984), and Michael Foreman's
Fortunately, Unfortunately (Andersen, 2011), only with a few simple sentences thrown in for good measure. The uncrowded illustrations have plenty of white space, so one can focus on the action and on Pom's spot-on expressions. In fact, words are barely necessary to convey the story. Read along with the above mentioned titles for a roller coaster of a storytime.—
Catherine Callegari, Gay-Kimball Library, Troy, NH"Pom and Pim are going out. It's warm. The sun is shining. What luck!" But Pom trips and falls on a piece of paper--which turns out to be money. Small adventures ensue, alternating good and bad luck. The brief text and droll ink and watercolor illustrations focus on small-child Pom and inanimate sidekick Pim, working together brilliantly to bring out the situational humor.
Pom is a small child with sparse orange curls, clad in a long purple sweater; Pim is Pom's inanimate sidekick of indeterminate species: a dirty pink, with two eyes and four floppy appendages, the better to be dragged around by. "Pom and Pim are going out. It's warm. The sun is shining. What luck!" But ahead, lying in wait, are a rock and a piece of paper. Pom trips over the rock ("Ouch! Bad luck") and does a face-plant on the paper -- which turns out to be "Money! What luck!" Small adventures ensue, alternating good and bad luck. Eating a huge ice-cream cone leads to a tummy ache -- but lying down to recover leads to spying a pink balloon above the bed; taking the balloon outside for a walk ("The balloon bounces beautifully") leads to it popping on a thorn bush. Pom is downcast but then, indomitable, comes up with the ideal use for the limp leftovers: "A raincoat for Pim!" And what luck: it's now raining. In matching pink coats the two friends splash through a spare but joyful double-page spread of raindrops and puddles. The brief text and droll ink and watercolor illustrations keep the focus tightly on Pom and Pim, working together brilliantly to bring out the considerable situational humor; Pom's facial expressions telegraph every fluctuating emotion. The good luck/bad luck progression will let readers predict events -- and then allow them to (perhaps) be happily surprised by the closing twist. Quirkier and much smaller in scope than classics such as Remy Charlip's Fortunately and Margery Cuyler's That's Good! That's Bad! -- but just as entrancing. martha v. parravano
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