Publisher's Hardcover ©2019 | -- |
In this superb companion tale to Cecil's Lucy (2016), the worlds of a moviegoing girl, an audacious mouse, and a crafty cat mingle and clash in Bloomville.It's a Saturday afternoon. Drawn by the scent of popcorn, Iris Espinosa heads to the cinema, passing by a big cat "with six toes on each paw" and a stoop kid on her walk. Taking her place in "her usual seat" in the front row, the young girl sits enthralled by Robin Hood when a mouse with a popcorn-stuffed stomach approaches the adjacent seat. The mouse snuggles up to Iris—burrowing into Iris' pocket—and ends up going home with her; she dubs the mouse Douglas in honor of her favorite actor. (Iris does not know that Douglas is, like her, female.) Now Douglas must brave the long journey—relatively speaking—back home to the cinema while eluding the hungry, terrible Six-Toed Cat, a master of patience "after so many years" of mouse-hunting experience. Similar to its beguiling predecessor, this adventure comes together in four acts full of quiet cliffhangers and thrilling mouse heroics. Cecil's playful language and shifting third-person narration create contexts within contexts; each numbered chapter assumes the viewpoint of a character, major or minor, in ways readers might need rereads to fully appreciate. The artist's duotone-spun, vintage artwork recalls the quaint splendors of yesteryear, peppered with minor visual gags and worldbuilding details. Primary human characters present white.A splendiferous wowzer. (Picture book. 5-8)
ALA Booklist (Sun Dec 01 00:00:00 CST 2019)Unfolding in acts like a silent film comes Cecil's charming companion to Lucy (2016). This time the protagonist is a little white mouse who lives in the Majestic Cinema. After she falls asleep in a movie-goer's sweater pocket (that's young Iris' pocket, by the way), the mouse inadvertently travels all the way to Iris' bedroom. Rather than shrieking as some people might, Iris is delighted when the mouse pokes her head out of the sweater and dashingly leaps upon the bed st like the girl's favorite film star, Douglas Fairbanks, might. And so, the mouse acquires the name Douglas and the vest from a nearby doll; her adventures are just beginning. The grayscale oil paintings, all circular as though seen through a spy glass, appear on every page and are whimsically captivating. Douglas' journey back to the theater is a swashbuckling adventure, one in which cats and perilous rooftop obstacles beset the daring rodent. But never fear, the tiny hero wins the day and finds a new friend to boot. Steer Mercy Watson readers toward this one.
Horn Book (Thu Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2019)A young film buff unknowingly brings a mouse home from the cinema. The child names the mouse Douglas in honor of movie star Douglas Fairbanks; before long, Douglas is back outside, where she sees new sights, befriends another mouse, explores city streets, and zigzags through danger on her way home. Textured, oval-shaped grayscale illustrations add to the story's old-timey, cinematic feel. A thoughtful balance of image and well-paced text lets gentle humor emerge.
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)In this superb companion tale to Cecil's Lucy (2016), the worlds of a moviegoing girl, an audacious mouse, and a crafty cat mingle and clash in Bloomville.It's a Saturday afternoon. Drawn by the scent of popcorn, Iris Espinosa heads to the cinema, passing by a big cat "with six toes on each paw" and a stoop kid on her walk. Taking her place in "her usual seat" in the front row, the young girl sits enthralled by Robin Hood when a mouse with a popcorn-stuffed stomach approaches the adjacent seat. The mouse snuggles up to Iris—burrowing into Iris' pocket—and ends up going home with her; she dubs the mouse Douglas in honor of her favorite actor. (Iris does not know that Douglas is, like her, female.) Now Douglas must brave the long journey—relatively speaking—back home to the cinema while eluding the hungry, terrible Six-Toed Cat, a master of patience "after so many years" of mouse-hunting experience. Similar to its beguiling predecessor, this adventure comes together in four acts full of quiet cliffhangers and thrilling mouse heroics. Cecil's playful language and shifting third-person narration create contexts within contexts; each numbered chapter assumes the viewpoint of a character, major or minor, in ways readers might need rereads to fully appreciate. The artist's duotone-spun, vintage artwork recalls the quaint splendors of yesteryear, peppered with minor visual gags and worldbuilding details. Primary human characters present white.A splendiferous wowzer. (Picture book. 5-8)
School Library Journal (Sun Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2019)Gr 2-4 Douglas Fairbanks was a star of silent film, known for playing dashing rogues like Don Juan, Zorro, and Robin Hood. "Douglas Fairbanks" is also the name of a small female mouse in this adorable book. The tiny rodent is given that name by Iris Espinosa, a young girl who picks up the mouse at the Majestic Cinema and names it after her favorite screen actor. That chance meeting is the first of a series of adventures for Douglas, who goes on wild adventures like her namesake, except on a smaller scale: riding in coat pockets, fleeing hungry felines, and swinging from clotheslines. Told in four acts, each page has no more than two paragraphs. The text includes no dialogue, as if it too were a silent movie. The duotone artwork also recalls these black-and-white films of the past. Each act is introduced with a dramatic two-page panoramic spread of the city block where Douglas has her adventures. Above the jagged rooftops are clouds that look like kernels of freshly popped popcorn. The text is accompanied by more intimate circular illustrations, each one a peephole into the charming town of Bloomville. The story takes place over a few days but feels like the adventure of a lifetime. VERDICT Cecil's tale is reminiscent of Kate DiCamillo, Beverly Cleary, or any other author exploring the inner lives of animals and how they interact with a human world that can be big and scary, as well as full of love and friendship. Chance Lee Joyner, Wilton Public and Gregg Free Library, NH
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
ALA Booklist (Sun Dec 01 00:00:00 CST 2019)
Horn Book (Thu Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2019)
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
School Library Journal (Sun Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2019)
* 1 *
On a Saturday afternoon in Bloomville,
Iris Espinosa put on her sister's blue sweater
and stepped out the front door.
A familiar buttery scent wafted through the air.
Popcorn.
Iris headed down the steps . . .
and made her way along the sidewalk,
past the enormous cat with six toes on each paw . . .
past Everett Dunn, whose mother did not allow him
to go beyond his stoop alone . . .
to the Majestic Cinema, where she bought a small box of
popcorn from a street vendor and a ticket from the box
office. Then she stepped inside.
She made her way down the aisle
and along the front row to her usual seat.
The lights dimmed, and the projector started up
with a click, click, click.
Iris watched the screen, rapt, as her hero leapt and
dashed about, narrowly escaping danger at every turn.
* 2 *
A few rows back, a little mouse was watching the screen,
too.
But the sight of popcorn falling through the fingers of the
Woman with the Large Hat a few seats over
pulled the little mouse away.
The Woman with the Large Hat came to the cinema every
afternoon. And, to the little mouse's delight,
she happened to be very careless with her snacks.
The little mouse danced about,
snatching falling kernels from the air . . .
and feasting on one fluffy bite after another,
until she felt rather queasy.
To ease her aching belly, the little mouse took a little
walk. And she belched a little belch.
Then she hopped up on a cushiony seat to take a nap.
To her surprise, a girl in a blue sweater was sitting
in the next seat over, smiling at her.
The little mouse considered skittering away.
But her belly was still rumbling. So she settled down
in the soft, cozy folds of the girl's sweater instead.
On the screen, the hero was bravely swinging on
a vine from one castle window to another.
But the little mouse was more interested in a pocket she
had discovered above the folds of the girl's blue sweater.
The pocket looked like the softest, coziest place of all.
So she climbed inside.
Then the little mouse fell asleep.
Excerpted from Douglas by Randy Cecil
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
In his follow-up to Lucy, Randy Cecil again tells a visually arresting tale in four acts — this time about a brave movie-theater mouse on a daring adventure.
When Iris Espinosa goes to the cinema, she doesn’t expect to meet a small mouse. And she certainly doesn’t expect that mouse to stow away in her sweater pocket. At home, Iris is delighted by the mouse’s daring, which reminds her of the actor Douglas Fairbanks. And so begin the adventures of a sweet, plucky mouse named Douglas, who must overcome obstacles aplenty, from hungry cats to broom-wielding humans, as she journeys across the tall rooftops of Bloomville to return to her movie-theater home. Full of high-stakes chases, clever escapes, and valiant rescues, Randy Cecil’s story is a cinematic and meticulously crafted celebration of courage and friendship.