Publisher's Hardcover ©2013 | -- |
First, let's talk about the fantastic endpapers, where Elephant, star of the show, contorts himself adorably into the shape of each letter of the alphabet, using his trunk to great advantage. Then, the story begins with the line, "The day Gracie loses her favorite book, Elephant finds it." Elephant sniffs the red hardcover, but his sniffing powers are so developed that the words written inside the book get sucked right up his trunk. When he sneezes, you know what that means: letters spewed everywhere. Elephant can't put the letters back into words, and so he asks for help. But Alligator wants to eat the letters, Seal wants to spin them like a ball, and the monkeys want to toss them around. Eventually, Elephant gives up and faces a difficult question from Gracie: "Where are my words?" With a little teamwork, Gracie and new pal Elephant set things straight. Pearson's art is the real winner here, as a loosely outlined, gray watercolor elephant with great facial expressions cavorts gigantically across the pages. A good choice for the smallest book lovers.
Horn Book (Tue Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2014)When Elephant finds Gracie's book, he sniffs it, snuffles up the words, and sneezes out a jumble of letters. His animal friends are no help in undoing the damage, but when Gracie discovers her empty book, she patiently helps Elephant re-form words and reads the story to him. The understated, dancing line-and-watercolor illustrations breathe life into the simple new-friendship story.
Kirkus ReviewsIn this offbeat tale, friendship forms as the result of a lovable, bumbling elephant's mistake. When Elephant comes across a lost book, he accidentally inhales its words. The words are soon sneezed out, but the letters are in chaos. Not knowing how to fix them, Elephant takes the letters to his friends, who, much to Elephant's distress, are not very interested in restoring them to the book. Clever design shows Alligator about to "chew" the letters, while Seal just wants to "spin" them. The use of a limited palette and lots of undecorated white space makes the close communication of jungle, savannah, forest and marine animals seem more plausible than it would otherwise. Finding no real help, he just sniffs the letters back up into his trunk. When Gracie--the book's owner--finds Elephant sitting on her beloved book, strangely, she chooses to pull on his trunk (an action that seems rather cruel). Only after that doesn't work does she tickle him, which elicits a sneeze that releases the letters. Gracie then uses the letters to create a new story about friendship. The adorable endpapers are particularly noteworthy, featuring Elephant posing as the 26 letters in the English alphabet, echoing the main theme of the book. A sweet, funny story--though not without its awkward moments--with a metafictive theme that should entertain. (Picture book. 3-6)
School Library Journal (Sun Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2013)PreS-Gr 1 Elephant is worried. It shows in his eyes. He has accidentally sucked up all the words in Gracie's favorite book. When he presents the blank-paged book to his friends, they don't know what to do. Instead of making words, Seal spins the letters around his nose, Monkey throws them around, and Alligator eats them. There are some tense moments when Gracie sees Elephant sitting on her lost book, so she pulls on his trunk and tickles it, and a big sneeze produces all the missing words. Pearson's humorous illustrations are drawn with a loose flowing line. An overlay of light watercolors brings to life Elephant's expressive face. Endpapers show him making the letters of the alphabet with this body. A lighthearted picture book for storytimes about friendship, cooperation, or books. Tanya Boudreau, Cold Lake Public Library, AB, Canada
ALA Booklist (Tue Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2013)
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Horn Book (Tue Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2014)
Kirkus Reviews
School Library Journal (Sun Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2013)
The day Gracie loses her favorite book, Elephant finds it. He sniffs the words ONCE UPON A TIME THERE WAS and--oops--they go up his trunk, where they wiggle and jiggle and make him sneeze. The letters fly through the air helter skelter, and when Elephant tries to put them back together, he can't figure out how to make the right words that fit. He asks his friends for help, but they just choose some of the letters to make up their own words--Alligator wants to CHEW them, Seal SPINs them, Monkeys THROW them, and Bear just SNOREs. Lucky for elephant, Gracie comes looking for her book. She makes the letters into the right words and then adds some of her own: a girl went to the zoo and made a new friend.