Kids are weird And other observations from parenthood

Jeffrey Brown, 1975-

Book - 2014

Jeffrey Brown wryly illustrates his five-year- old son's take on the world around him, from watching TV ("Elton John looks pretty in that shirt") to playing with toys ("This truck can survive on very little water") to odd requests ("Don't feel happy at me"), capturing the sweetly weird times that mothers and fathers everywhere experience with their own curious, pure-minded kids.

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Subjects
Published
San Francisco : Chronicle Books [2014]
Language
English
Main Author
Jeffrey Brown, 1975- (-)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : chiefly colored illustrations ; 18 cm
ISBN
9781452118703
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Brown launched his comics career drawing short-form, self-deprecating autobiographical pieces; more recently, he's found commercial success with a series of books portraying a surprisingly paternal Darth Vader raising his young offspring, Luke and Leia. Here he combines the two with a delightful collection of cartoons depicting the charmingly quirky utterances of his preschooler son. Along with his loving parents, we observe Oscar at the dinner table (I'm the master of bacon); watching television (Elton John looks pretty in that shirt); playing with his toys (This truck can survive on very little water); in the bathroom (Since you're in here, I'm going to wash my hands for real); and dictating to his parents (Don't feel happy at me). Brown's ragged, childlike drawing style is the ideal vehicle for capturing Oscar's Aww -inspiring remarks. The book's strongest appeal will be to young parents including Brown's early fans, who have echoed his progression from aimless slackerdom to domesticated adulthood who will see their own tots' adorableness reflected in Oscar's innocently clever observations.--Flagg, Gordon Copyright 2014 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Brown's popular recent works, like Darth Vader and Son, feature epically horrific villains bumping up against the quotidian concerns of family life. The author's latest feels like more of the same-but without the preconceptions inherent in the Lucas universe to draw from, it's not as funny (everything is funnier when Darth Vader says it). Brown, reprising his role here as the resolutely unshaven dad/artiste, notes early on that there's a short window between the time when kids don't talk at all and when their first verbal malapropisms begin. The mostly single-page episodes each center on a particular turn of phrase from his young son: "Don't forget to smash people," "We can't have a play date because my mom doesn't like crying," "I'm going to eat all the people in the world." There's several chuckles throughout, and even a few genuine laughs. But the resemblance to Kids Say the Darnedest Things overpowers most of the book's other gentle charms. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved