Horn Book
(Thu Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Only-child Maya, a young Black girl, receives a present from her granddaddy: an un-ruly and very large pink pig named Julius to be her companion. Julius creates chaos in the household but also brings a riot of fun and joy to Maya's life. Exuberant, boldly colored, and inventive illustrations in acrylic, watercolor, fabric, instant coffee (see "inventive"), crayon, and India ink use a variety of purposely unsettling perspectives while always centering Maya and Julius's experiences. A reissue of a 1993 picture book with an unexpected but winning author/illustrator pairing.
School Library Journal
(Fri Dec 01 00:00:00 CST 2023)
PreS-K— Jeff Mack, Mo Willems, and others have gone this route: presenting a story that makes no sense but has so much humor and heart that readers will love it anyway. Maya's grandfather, who splits his time between Alabama and Alaska, has a gift for Maya. A large pink pig, perhaps four times her size, named Julius, becomes her best friend and mentor, and she becomes his. Pilkey has a riot building the scenes of Maya's unpleasantly grim parents, who dislike Julius and his coffee-guzzling dribbling, and the joy of Julius, galloping down the road like the pony Maya always wanted. Every scene of them is a portrait of a mutual admiration society in a growth spurt, even as Maya makes Julius develop manners, and Julius makes Maya aware of how much fun it is "trying on hats and dancing to jazz records" with friends her own size and age. Whether this is an imaginary friend or a real pet, or any version of those, the team of Maya and Julius know how to be friends, rubbing off each other's rough edges. VERDICT Color-drenched acrylic paintings and outsized proportions provide humor and affection in equal doses. Readers will want to settle in for a second read.— Kimberly Olson Fakih