Publisher's Hardcover ©2023 | -- |
Books. Juvenile fiction.
Books and reading. Juvenile fiction.
Fiction. Authorship. Juvenile fiction.
Book covers. Juvenile fiction.
Books. Fiction.
Books and reading. Fiction.
Fiction. Authorship. Fiction.
Book covers. Fiction.
Starred Review Claiming to be the first book that has ever written itself, this titular tome delivers a series of grievances to a "bookist" reader om "Things That Grate My Gears" ("3. People who skip to the end. If the end was meant to come sooner, it'd be called the middle.'") to the shocking revelation that unwanted books are murdered (which is to say "pulped," like a smoothie) and then recycled into toilet paper. At the same time, a catalog of things that make a book unwanted, like an unmemorable cover and writing so dry that even bookworms gag on it, leads to a dialogue about stories that ends with that unseen reader on the verge of assuming a new role in the relationship: writer. At, and to, that point, the literally liber-al narrator adds a final bit of useful writerly advice: to "make a point of making it fun." Ayoade certainly has, and Freeman likewise cranks up the hilarity with loosely drawn cartoon images on every spread, ranging from unappealing book (and record) covers to fancies like a library maze ("This way to WRITING BOOKS' and GETTING RICH'"), a shushing librarian erupting from a mound of toilet paper (talk about bookist), and people lining up to have ideas poured into their heads out of a dump truck. Could well leave even confirmed nonreaders tempted to turn over a new leaf.
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Wed Dec 06 00:00:00 CST 2023)Comedian and actor Ayoade explores storytelling and books themselves.Readers are quickly introduced to the premise: The narrator of this bookâ¦is the book itself. Directly addressing the audience, the narrator waxes philosophical about judging books by covers before plunging readers into a story told in second person about a child who finds "a particular Book That No One Wanted To Read" on a library shelf. Interspersed with imagined, telepathic dialogue between reader and book, this delightfully droll work casually covers everything from footnotes to story structure; information about excess unwanted books being "pulped" by publishers leads to a gag about the book not wanting to be recycled into toilet paper. The design is clean, with different fonts effectively used to maintain speaker clarity, and facts about books blend beautifully with wacky, tongue-in-cheek illustrations. The character "you" is a reader stand-in with a humorous composite depiction (and so lacks race, gender, or any other identity, though other people depicted throughout are diverse in skin tone). In many ways a spiritual successor to B.J. Novak's The Book With No Pictures (2014), the book (and Book, the character) will encourage readers to approach literature with a sense of play.Lovingly crafted metafictive silliness both experimental and engaging. (Illustrated fiction. 8-12)
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)Comedian and actor Ayoade explores storytelling and books themselves.Readers are quickly introduced to the premise: The narrator of this bookâ¦is the book itself. Directly addressing the audience, the narrator waxes philosophical about judging books by covers before plunging readers into a story told in second person about a child who finds "a particular Book That No One Wanted To Read" on a library shelf. Interspersed with imagined, telepathic dialogue between reader and book, this delightfully droll work casually covers everything from footnotes to story structure; information about excess unwanted books being "pulped" by publishers leads to a gag about the book not wanting to be recycled into toilet paper. The design is clean, with different fonts effectively used to maintain speaker clarity, and facts about books blend beautifully with wacky, tongue-in-cheek illustrations. The character "you" is a reader stand-in with a humorous composite depiction (and so lacks race, gender, or any other identity, though other people depicted throughout are diverse in skin tone). In many ways a spiritual successor to B.J. Novak's The Book With No Pictures (2014), the book (and Book, the character) will encourage readers to approach literature with a sense of play.Lovingly crafted metafictive silliness both experimental and engaging. (Illustrated fiction. 8-12)
Starred Review ALA Booklist (Tue Feb 28 00:00:00 CST 2023)
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Wed Dec 06 00:00:00 CST 2023)
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
From actor-author-broadcaster-comedian-filmmaker Richard Ayoade comes a book narrated by . . . a book. Quirky, smart, and genre-busting, this is the saga of a book that nobody wants to read—until the day it meets YOU.
The life of a book isn’t easy, especially when people judge you by your cover (not every book can be adorned with sparkly unicorns!). And this narrator should know—it’s the book itself, and it has a lot of opinions. It gets irritated when readers bend its pages back, and it finds authors quite annoying. But it does have a story to tell. Through witty direct address and charming illustrations, readers meet a book that has never been read, with a cover the boring color of a school lunch table and pages so dry they give bookworms indigestion. But what happens when this book meets you, a curious reader? Multitalented author Richard Ayoade and award-winning illustrator Tor Freeman bring to life a hilariously subversive take on the nature of books and reading, with a heartening theme of finding the courage to tell our own stories. Readers of all ages will be delighted by the myriad bookish references and laughs on every page.