Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Party planning causes pandemonium among well-meaning zoo animals in this picture book. Wanting Little Robin to have "the perfect fooohhhuuod," "Mr. Owl from the United States" hollers, while "Mr. Cow from England" hopes noisily for "the perfect moosic." The animals--including roosters from China, Germany, Jamaica, Nigeria, and Portugal as well as, slightly bafflingly, mammals from unspecified origins--soon become frenzied over music choices as each sings in their native language. " 'Ribbit. Ribbit,' sang the Pacific Tree frog," before the Polish, Iranian, Korean, and Thai frogs join in. Onomatopoeia in various languages is highlighted in different colors as Ms. Water Buffalo eventually serves as conductor. Similar issues arise when each animal contributes cultural cuisine (says Mr. Frog from Italy, "Wait until you taste my Riiiiiibolita!" quickly rebutted by "Ms. Parakeet from India")--until an accident results in an unexpected happy ending. A tidy promotion of cross-cultural collaboration unites this chaotic picture book by Jackson, with bright, jovial illustrations created in watercolor and rendered digitally by Baum-Owoyele. Ages up to 8. (Aug.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
Sundry animals with a common goal squabble, shriek, and work it out. It's Little Robin's birthday. The "other animals in the zoo" are planning a party. There's nary a cage, zookeeper, or human; the "zoo" claim is merely a casual, forgettable premise that explains the wildly diverse animals hanging out together. There are roosters from Portugal, Jamaica, Nigeria, Germany, and China and frogs from North America, Poland, Iran, Korea, Thailand, and Italy. (Origins are conveyed textually.) When everyone tries to plan the party's "perfect" music ("moosic," says Mr. Cow from England) by belting their own song, it's a "cacophany"--animals are "roaring, mooing, yelping, braying, squawking and meowing," all in their respective languages. There is the same problem with food ("fooohhhuuod" says Mr. Owl from the United States): Shouts for curry, phō, egusi, and sadza; an artichoke, a croissant, and sushi fly through the air. Both tussles resolve with a quick, didactic message. Sing "to-ge-ther," commands Ms. Water Buffalo, the din becoming a "grand melody" under her direction. Accidentally mixing all the foods somehow produces "the tastiest thing" Little Robin's ever eaten. The cooperation lessons offer no applicable how-to's--combining myriad international dishes into one mish-mosh-stew might not really taste superb--but Baum-Owoyele's cheerful watercolors have a true party feeling. The small trim size overcrowds the animals, but their bright colors and keen-edged shapes, crisp and energetic against the white background, bounce with energy. Busy, crowded, vibrant--like a party. (Picture book. 3-6) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.