Peter Bently is the author of many books for young readers, including King Jack and the Dragon, illustrated by Helen Oxenbury, which the New York Times called "at once contemporary and classic." His Cats Ahoy! received the Roald Dahl Funny Prize in his native England. Peter lives in Devon, England, with his wife and two children.
Sara Ogilvie is an illustrator and printmaker and was the 2011
BookTrust Best New Illustrators Award winner. Dogs Don't Do Ballet,
which she illustrated, was shortlisted for the 2010 Roald Dahl
Funny Prize and the 2010 BookTrust Early Years Award. Sara lives in
lives in Newcastle upon Tyne in the north of England.
*Starred review* Is there anything worse than parents? Always
telling kids to clean up, eat their vegetables, and get a move on
already? Well, the lilting rhymes in this picture book from the
author of King Jack and the Dragon (2011) remind little tots of all
the helpful and loving things parents do. Each humorous couplet
describing a good use for a parent is paired with a warm, childlike
drawing of big-eyed, innocent kids in some kind of scrape. Blanket
fort about to collapse? "Parents are tent poles for dens that are
wonky." Accidentally drop ice cream on a fancy lady's new boots?
"Parents say 'sorry' to folks who've just met you." Hands dirty
after a mud-puddle expedition? "Parents are towels for wiping your
grime on." Ogilvie's lively pencil, pastel, and ink illustrations,
full of sketchy lines and bright, colorful smudges, perfectly
capture the riotous mess the oblivious, rosy-cheeked children trail
behind them wherever they go. Untied shoelaces, wayward toys, and
spilled food scatter over the backgrounds while sometimes
exasperated--but always adoring--parents pick up the pieces. With
good-natured humor and a jaunty rhyme scheme perfect for reading
aloud, Bently and Ogilvie's spirited romp celebrates the love
between chaotic kiddos and their steadfast parents.--
"Booklist"
Sometimes it seems parents are continually nagging children to
brush their teeth, eat their peas, and so forth. British duo
Bentley and Ogilvie joyously remind readers that parents are good
for so much more! In deliciously rhyming text, readers are told of
all of the wonderful things parents do, from giving cuddles to
telling stories and tucking in at night. "Parents are sofas for
putting your feet up, and Dumpsters for bits that you don't want to
eat up." The charming and larger-than-life artwork enhances the
humor as readers see parents of various ethnic backgrounds having
grime wiped on them and doubling as donkeys and tree trunks to
their children. The mixed-media illustrations will hit home with
parents and children alike with the realistic messiness and
bedraggled appearance of some of the adults. The combination of
pastels, paint, and ink look whimsical and simplistic at the same
time. Details enhance the text and will keep readers searching the
pictures that match the words, such as the well-dressed lady with
the purse dog who has had an ice-cream cone dropped on her foot by
a little girl: "Parents say 'sorry' to folks who've just met you."
Sure to bring out the giggles at storytime or bedtime.-- "School
Library Journal"
What are parents good for? Bently (The Great Balloon Hullaballoo)
offers a jaunty rhyming catalogue of the myriad functions mothers
and fathers fulfill in the lives of their kids. While the opening
scene acknowledges that it's easy to think "that your mom and your
dad/ are there just to nag you and boss you like mad," subsequent
pages offer up true-to-life examples of parents at work, at play,
and under duress ("Parents are great to build mountains of sand on,
/ and lovely big heaters for warming your hands on"). To bring home
such points, Ogilvie's (Dogs Don't Do Ballet) wispy, mixed-media
compositions depict a spectrum of families in energetic, realistic,
and humorous scenes of parenting in action. Her adults are
alternately exhausted, beleaguered, bemused, and content as they
play with and tend to tireless children. The book wraps up with a
playfully cozy cautionary note as Bently warns, "Once they have
fixed all your problems... and pickles, / you'd better watch out
because parents love... TICKLES!" This happy love-letter will ring
true for many families. Ages 4-8. Author's agent: Jodie Hodges,
United Agents. Illustrator's agent: NB Illustration. (May)--
"Pubishers Weekly, March 24, 2014"
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