Publisher's Hardcover ©2016 | -- |
Grocery shopping. Juvenile fiction.
Mothers and daughters. Juvenile fiction.
Temper tantrums. Juvenile fiction.
Grocery shopping. Fiction.
Mothers and daughters. Fiction.
Temper tantrums. Fiction.
How does a toddler transform from angel to monster in one quick trip to the grocery store? The answer is found in this zany book. Roxy, a toddler bunny, promises to be good on a trip to the grocery store with her mom, but it doesn't take long for some cracks to appear in Roxy's behavior. She crunches the bag of chips she's supposed to place nicely in the cart, and then tosses around the loaf of bread. Next she rolls cans down the aisle and runs off with the cart. But it's a pink cake with a piggy face that totally does Roxy in. She moves from begging to hold the cake to demanding to eat the cake immediately. Roxy suddenly transforms into the ultimate tyrannical, wailing-in-full-tantrum mode through the aisles, the checkout line, and all the way home. Murphy's illustrations, done in colored pencils and pens, are adept at showing ordinary scenes and frosting-covered chaos. The funny ending and over-the-top drama will sit just right with young readers.
Kirkus ReviewsA parent-child power struggle at the grocery story provokes the titular meltdown.When Mom decides to bring her little daughter, Roxy (both anthropomorphic white rabbits), to the grocery story, she says "Roxy can help" her. Exuberant Roxy is excited about this prospect, but her antics suggest that her help will beâ¦less than helpful. Sure enough, Roxy is a bit rough with the groceries, and after she goes running off with the cart, Mom straps her into the seat. But this doesn't contain the mischief when, against her better instincts, Mom lets Roxy hold a boxed cake, and Roxy, with "a very determined smile," demands to eat it then and there. The eponymous meltdown ensues! Mom is embarrassed, frustrated, and eager to get home as Roxy pitches a fit down the aisle, at the checkout, and during the walk home in her stroller. When an exasperated Mom asks "What do you say to Mommy?" at book's end, the closing image shows Roxy offering, not an apology, but a prettied-up request for the contended cake: "â¦please?" Murphy's colored-pencilâand-pen illustrations augment the humor of her text, which hinges on the dialogue between Mom and Roxy. A slice-of-life toddler story that squarely maintains focus on the toddler. (Picture book. 2-6)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Murphy's books have often comically explored the relationships between headstrong children and frazzled parents, and this story is no exception. Roxy, a rambunctious bunny toddler, is ready to help her mother shop for groceries, but she soon starts rolling cans down the aisle and throwing loaves of bread in the air instead of placing them in the cart. After Roxy gets her hands on a "piggy cake" that she's eager to eat, the messy result involves lots of wailing on Roxy's part and just as many apologies from her mother: "Everyone was looking." Carefully inked illustrations telegraph the emotions of all of Murphy's characters, including Roxy's eagerness and rage, her mother's embarrassment and anger, and the irritation of their fellow shoppers. Murphy's use of repetition (Roxy often echoes her mother's comments) and a mischievous ending-suffice it to say, the words "I'm sorry" never escape Roxy's lips-are just a few of the ways Murphy keeps her story true to life, as she suggests that sometimes the only way to beat a tantrum, as far as parents are concerned, is to suffer through it. Ages 3-7. (Sept.)
School Library Journal (Sat Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2016)PreS-K Roxy the rabbit has loads of energy. She bounces up and down when getting dressed, and she can barely sit still in her stroller. "WHEEEEEE!" she says as she and her mother enter the grocery store. Her mother is patient when Roxy tries to "help," but you can almost hear her mother's voice get louder as she reminds Roxy not to squeeze the bags, throw the bread, or roll the cans. These are funny moments but nothing compared to the hilarity in the dialogue and colored pencil and pen illustrations when the pig cake goes into the cart. Seeing Roxy plunge headfirst into the shopping cart while screaming, "GIVE ME THE PIGGY CAKE NOW!" will guarantee laughter from any group of parents and children. Murphy doesn't forget to include the embarrassment on Roxy's mom's face and the horrified looks from onlookers, either. Tantrums happen, but somehow they are easier to deal with and better to laugh about and talk about in a book. VERDICT A useful addition to most collections. Tanya Boudreau, Cold Lake Public Library, Alta., Canada
ALA Booklist (Thu Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2016)
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal (Sat Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2016)
From the creator of the beloved Large family comes a sympathetic—and simply hilarious—look at a toddler’s grocery-store tantrum.
One morning, Mom decides to take Roxy grocery shopping. “Roxy can help Mommy," she says cheerfully. Roxy makes a promising start, but when she squeezes the potato chip bag and rolls a can of beans across the floor, Mom is not pleased. “You’re not being very helpful, Roxy," she says, plunking the child back in the grocery cart. “Not very helpful," Roxy agrees. But being agreeable lasts only as far as the bakery aisle, where the need for a certain piggy-face cake spurs a level of high-decibel determination—and a display of headfirst acrobatics—that has onlookers staring in awe. With the signature humor that made Five Minutes’ Peace a classic, Jill Murphy escalates a toddler meltdown to its comical breaking point, leaving readers laughing and heaving a sigh of relief not to be driving (or riding in) that grocery cart.