Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
We all know the work that goes into parenting. This book and its companion celebrate and name all the unpaid jobs moms and dads do at home after their regular 9-to-5 jobs are over."My mom works as a carpenter. / She builds things big and strong. // At night, though, she's a general / who'll march the troops along. // She's also part-time curator / with passion for the arts. // And frequent archaeologist / in search of buried parts." Wang's scenes will be familiar to fans of his Cozy Classics board books, done with his brother Jack Wang; crafted of needle-felted characters and found or made props and then photographed, they are genius, making clear the many parental duties: enforcing bedtime, changing out the fridge art, and combing through the laundry. Companion title Great, Job, Dad! publishes simultaneously and follows a similar format. His day job is "manager"; at home, his duties include "waiter," "chauffeur," "inspector" (of diapers), and "judge" (between siblings). Both titles show both traditional gender roles and otherwise, and they end similarly: "Dad does one job to pay the bills, / the others out of love." Mom! features a white family with an older brother and younger sister; Dad! spotlights an Asian family with an older sister and younger brother. The photography and needle felting are not to be missed. The backmatter provides detail on the artist's process, complete with photographs; this is sure to capture readers' imaginations.The artwork in this tongue-in-cheek look at the many roles moms—and dads, in the separate title—play in family life is certain to have readers poring over the pages. (Picture book. 3-8)
Kirkus Reviews
(Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
We all know the work that goes into parenting. This book and its companion celebrate and name all the unpaid jobs moms and dads do at home after their regular 9-to-5 jobs are over."My mom works as a carpenter. / She builds things big and strong. // At night, though, she's a general / who'll march the troops along. // She's also part-time curator / with passion for the arts. // And frequent archaeologist / in search of buried parts." Wang's scenes will be familiar to fans of his Cozy Classics board books, done with his brother Jack Wang; crafted of needle-felted characters and found or made props and then photographed, they are genius, making clear the many parental duties: enforcing bedtime, changing out the fridge art, and combing through the laundry. Companion title Great, Job, Dad! publishes simultaneously and follows a similar format. His day job is "manager"; at home, his duties include "waiter," "chauffeur," "inspector" (of diapers), and "judge" (between siblings). Both titles show both traditional gender roles and otherwise, and they end similarly: "Dad does one job to pay the bills, / the others out of love." Mom! features a white family with an older brother and younger sister; Dad! spotlights an Asian family with an older sister and younger brother. The photography and needle felting are not to be missed. The backmatter provides detail on the artist's process, complete with photographs; this is sure to capture readers' imaginations.The artwork in this tongue-in-cheek look at the many roles moms—and dads, in the separate title—play in family life is certain to have readers poring over the pages. (Picture book. 3-8)
Publishers Weekly
(Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Wang, cocreator of the Cozy Classics series, fashions scenes from the life of a mother and her two children, the needle-felted figures staged and photographed in scale model sets. A child narrator praises his mother-s many roles. As a professional carpenter, the sandy-haired mother -builds things big and strong.- But at home, she-s a data-collecting scientist (she marks the boy-s changing height on the wall). She-s also sometimes -a zookeeper who handles beastly crews,- including the family-s rambunctious pets and the mess-making siblings. Wang captures a remarkable sense of motion, expression, and realism in his scenes. This little family feels so authentic, readers may forget that its is made from wool. Also available: Great Job, Dad! Ages 3-7. (Mar.)