School Library Journal
(Thu Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2016)
K-Gr 2 "The House That Jack Built" gets a remodel when monsters, including a vampire, a ghost, a mummy, a witch, a black cat, a black widow spider, bats, and Frankenstein, move in. Although reminiscent of the source material, this has a definite Halloween bent. The mummy raises a wall. The werewolf puts in a door. The skeleton nails down the floor. The witch is cooking her "brew." The zombie screams, and the ghost shouts "boo!" This causes the bats to fly about. Of course, all of this action is in rhyme. The characters in the brightly colored illustrations possess varying degrees of scariness, though the spider's markings are more artistically drawn than those that would be found in a field guide. The spread showing the ghost shouting "boo!" is especially effective in its creepiness. VERDICT A great choice for a primary grade Halloween storytime. Elaine Lesh Morgan, formerly at Multnomah County Library, Portland, OR
Horn Book
(Sat Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2017)
Using a "House That Jack Built" structure, this book describes how various witches, vampires, and ghosts contribute to the (shoddy) construction of a "spooky" house, and the resultant chaos when trick-or-treaters come to the door. There's good read-aloud potential here (although the verse's meter may require practice), and the pen-and-ink illustrations are frenetically funny.
Publishers Weekly
(Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
It-s one big chain of scares in this Halloweeny version of -This Is the House That Jack Built- from the duo behind Pluto Visits Earth! As assembly of the house gets underway, various creatures inadvertently spook each other: -This is the skeleton who nailed down the floor,/ That upset the werewolf who put in a door,/ That stopped the spider who started to crawl/ That shocked the mummy who raised the wall.- The nervous, jittery ink lines that characterize Lee-s work fit the Halloween setting to a tee: the story-s physical comedy, which includes a monster accidentally smashing the skeleton to bits with an armchair, peaks when it-s revealed that a group of young trick-or-treaters are behind all the mayhem. Kids can be scary, too, Metzger and Lee remind readers, just in time for end-of-October mischief. Ages 3-5. Author-s agent: Brenda Bowen, Sanford J. Greenburger Associates. (June)