Horn Book
(Tue Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2017)
Frog tries to help Peeper, a bird with a broken wing, and Zeep, an alien with a broken spaceship, regain flight: "Peeper and Zeep go up. / Peeper and Zeep go down. / Frog will try again." Eventually their families come looking, and they all live happily together. The simple sentences and offbeat, naively styled illustrations explore themes of perseverance, friendship, and belonging.
Kirkus Reviews
In this picture book with an intentionally easy-to-read text, a bird and an extraterrestrial find friendship while far from home.Peeper, a little brown bird, flutters across the page in an erratic path. Zeep, a purple space creature, soars alone in the vastness of dark blue space. Both fall to Earth, Peeper breaking his wing, Zeep breaking his spaceship. They lose themselves in the woods, then meet. Needing help to get to their respective homes, they seek out A. Frog, who resides in a green geodesic dome and appears to be an engineer or a scientist, judging by visual clues such as pencils, a drafting board, rulers, and tools. Frog's stove is a Bunsen burner, and the window flower vases are lab flasks. Unfortunately, Frog is not immediately successful, catapults and jet-propulsion packs failing to get Peeper and Zeep where they need to go; a larger dome they work on together seems to be the solution. The ending, in which Peeper's and Zeep's families somehow find them and join them in the dome, is emotionally satisfying but logically less so. Gudeon's cartoonish forms are constructed with thick outlines and flat, computer-generated pigment. Occasionally background objects and scenery appear as brush strokes of opaque paint and watercolor. Although the mostly one-syllable, four- to six-word sentences string together to form a story of trial and error, it is the visual narrative that really tells this story. A sweet story that's not without its narrative gaps. (Picture book/early reader. 3-6)
School Library Journal
(Wed Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2017)
PreS-Gr 1What do a young bird and a purple alien have in common? At first, only circumstance. Peeper has fallen from his nest and hurt his wing. Zeep has crashed his spaceship. Both long to return home but don't know how to get there. In a geodesic dome, they find A. Frog, inventor. Frog sends them aloft using one kind of propulsion and then another, but they're no closer to their goal. Frog is forced to think outsideor, rather, insidethe box, and the three build a new home together. All they need for perfect happiness is—and they have to wait only two pages for it—for their families to join them. This is Gudeon's third book. In all three, the sophisticated, digitally colored ink illustrations come across as quirky and childlike. VERDICT The easy, repetitive text complemented by eye-catching cartoon art will encourage and reinforce young children's efforts to read on their own. A great choice for beginning reader collections.—Susan Weitz, formerly at Spencer-Van Etten School District, Spencer, NY