ALA Booklist
(Fri Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2019)
Like all heroines, Zora has a dream: though she is a dog, she wants to fly so that she can catch the pesky squirrel who taunts her with its chattering. Even the skepticism of her friend Tully the cat does not deter her. Her failures don't dampen her spirit either. She vaults from the teeter-totter at the park and tries to use a beach umbrella to soar like a kite, but nothing works til an emergency involving Tully launches Zora off her feet. Stinson will delight readers and listeners with her use of action words like crash, splash, and thunk, which are interspersed with the squirrel's onomatopoeic chitterchitterchitter! Scott's illustrations are equally evocative: Zora is the main focus of each page, in mid-stride, leap, or splat. In one, as she sits in the shadow of a large plane, we are reminded of how small she is, though her determination is big. Pair with Ashley Spires' The Most Magnificent Thing (2014) for another story about a big dreamer.
Kirkus Reviews
In this Canadian picture book, Zora, a small brown dog, is determined to fly.When Zora stares at the squirrel that yaks at her from the fence and chases it, she isn't fast enough to catch it. Again. But she knows that if only she could fly, she would succeed. Even as Tully, a cat lounging on a tree branch, informs Zora quellingly that "dogs can't fly," Zora, nonetheless, tries. She leaps—and falls; jumps on a teeter-totter vacated by two children—and falls. She splays on the ground, imitating the shadow of an airplane flying overhead, whispering, "Up! Up! Up!!" but she still doesn't fly. Disheartened, Zora heads off to nap when she is interrupted by a cry for help and sees Tully, hanging perilously from the branch (illustratively shown in an impressive angled overhead view that visually emphasizes the height and the danger). "Zora's everything tingled!" She leaps high for Tully, catching her. Stinson's story has endearing, unexpected details and is a heartwarming affirmation of the powers of aspiration and determination. Scott's images show a sophisticated color sense that creates depth and atmosphere with their push/pull of warms and cools, and his portrayal of Zora gives her a remarkable degree of movement and expression. His varied viewer perspectives, too, are noteworthy.A clever and endearing story, expertly illustrated, with an affirming message. (Picture book. 3-8)