Review by Booklist Review
Pigeons: they're cute, they're ubiquitous, they're hungry. The duo behind Llama Destroys the World (2019) team up for another hyperbolic tale of absurdity that begins with a girl feeding a pigeon, or coo, as they're known in the story. This innocent gesture quickly gets out of hand as she is swarmed by a park's worth of coos, all demanding food. Cue the silly escapades! The story's manic energy is captured in its simple digital illustrations, which employ clean lines, vivid colors against white backgrounds, and a cartoonish style. Second-person narration further adds to the drama ( You will try to escape. They will follow you. ), which rapidly escalates. The birds do indeed follow the girl home (and everywhere else), leaving copious coo poo in their wake and steadily pushing her to the breaking point. Resigned to her feathery fate, the girl takes her flock on a walk to the park, where she finally discovers a solution to her coo-nundrum. This is a sure winner for the preschool set and a worthy companion for Mo Willems' Pigeon.--Julia Smith Copyright 2020 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Married collaborators Stutzman and Fox (Llama Destroys the World) present the darkly comic--and maybe even existential--hazards presented by a whole flock of pigeons ("coos") in this send-up of cause-and-effect titles such as If You Give a Mouse a Cookie. "If you feed one"--a child stands with a bag of bread, beguiled by a small gray coo--"they will ALL come." Quickly surrounded, the child is tailed by coos ("through the park,/ down the street.../ Even at karate lessons") who never stop eating and poo with impunity ("coo poos covering everything"). "No matter what scheme you cook up," the narrator cautions as a variety of "Go Away" signs are installed, "your plans. Will. FAIL." Should the child capitulate ("Just accept your fate..../ Give them names./ Knit them scarves"), or could it be that someone who truly loves the coos is missing them terribly? Fox's graphic illustrations echo the text's giddy rhythms, with the pigeons styled, Willems-like, as pert, wide-eyed, always-in-profile graphic motifs that skip, flit, and, yes, poo prodigiously across the pages. Ages 4--8. (Feb.)
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review
If you give a coo a breadcrumb....While not a cumulative story like Laura Numeroff and Felicia Bond's picture book about a mouse and a cookie, Stutzman and Fox's latest collaboration does function as a silly cautionary tale of sorts: When the young protagonist of color fails to heed the text's advice and gives a coo a breadcrumb, all heck breaks loose. The titular "coos" are pigeons, and like Mo Willems' bird, they have one-track minds. Single-mindedly intent on getting ever more crumbs after the depicted child feeds just one coo, a whole flock follows the increasingly alarmed protagonist "through the park, down the street, all the way HOME." This kid just can't shake those birds! Avian havoc ensues in the clean-lined, stylized cartoons and then heightens as, "to thank you for feeding them, the coos will leave poos." If it's true that being pooped on by a bird brings good luck, Stutzman and Fox's protagonist accrues some serious great fortune in the next spreads, which will undoubtedly provoke laughter among readers observing the bright white splotches that dot the pages like a most unappetizing sprinkling of popcorn. If you can't beat 'em, join 'em ends up being the poor, splattered child's tactic, until a final return visit to the park reveals someone who's been missing the coos ever since they left.Coo-coo storytime fun. (Picture book. 3-7) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.