Review by School Library Journal Review
Baby-Toddler-Cauley introduces favorite animals in a guessing-game format. Young readers are prompted to make connections between parts of a creature on one page that are revealed in full on the following page. ("Who has tall, spotted legs, and a long, curvy tongue? Hello, baby giraffe.") Predictable text keeps the game going, and adorable watercolor paintings will attract the toddler and preschool set. While the animals are anthropomorphized (huge eyes, rosy cheeks, and garden party outfits; for example, caps, garlands, and jackets), they are also remarkable for their realistic depictions-fur, feathers, and feet are detailed and fairly accurate, and show respect for readers' scientific curiosity as well as their cognitive skill development. VERDICT A sweet addition for early childhood collections. Steve Jenkins's What Do You Do with a Tail Like That? and Who Am I? use the same guessing-game format and may be better choices for elementary collections.-Lisa Lehmuller, Paul Cuffee Maritime Charter School, Providence © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
This sweet baby-animal book will prompt interactive reading between baby humans and their caregivers.The anthropomorphic lamb dressed in a straw hat and lace-collared shirt that looks out at readers from the front cover is representative of other sweet critters who populate the pages of this picture book. But instead of simply presenting each adorable portrait, Cauley establishes a structural guessing-game pattern. Small illustrations of parts of an animal's body appear at the edges on each recto, with accompanying text asking questions such as "Who has tall, spotted legs, / and a long, curvy tongue?" Then the page-turn reveals a verso illustration with the big-eyed face of the baby animal in question gazing out at readers. ("Hello, baby giraffe" is the accompanying text to the question quoted above.) A pastel palette reinforces the gentle tone of words and watercolor pictures, and the culminating spread shows the whole crowd of baby animals together in a peaceable kingdom of cuteness. "Oh, hello babies," reads the text, implying that these babies are looking out at the baby readers. Couldn't-be-cuter Q-and-A for the ABCs set. (Picture book. 18 mos.-3) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.