The Think-Ups

Claire Alexander

Book - 2022

What's there to do on a rainy day? If you are someone like Kiki, with a big imagination, you teach someone how to play the Think-Ups! Here's how to play: take turns thinking up any creature you like and, just like that, that creature (or several of them) will appear. In a blink, the house is filled with hopping, hungry, messy Think-Ups! Quick, Kiki! What are the rules for ending the game?

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Location Call Number   Status
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Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
Somerville, Massachusetts : Candlewick Press 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Claire Alexander (author)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9781536220124
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

It's raining, to the dismay of two children, but pale-skinned Kiki, who sports a pair of bunny ears, has an idea: "We could play the Think-Ups!" she says. "All you have to do is think up a Think-Up and it will appear!" Her first attempt conjures a number of bunnies, which hop around the rug. "I'll be Kiki Flower Blossom the vet, and you can be Bob, my helper!" she tells Anna, who has light brown skin. In no time at all the house is filled with more Think-Ups: a moose ("Just one, but a very large one"), "wriggling, giggling octopuses," and hungry koalas who gnaw on everything in sight. Kiki pays less attention to the outcomes than does Anna, who has her own desires and realizes that things are getting out of hand: "Oh, Kiki! What have you done?... And please stop calling me Bob!" Fortunately, Kiki's just as practiced at getting out of trouble as she is getting into it. Digital spreads by Alexander (A Little Bit Different) utilize charcoal-style outlines and soft colors to render a sweet visual idiom in chaotic domestic scenes. A fast-moving story with two high-spirited heroes, Alexander's tale prizes imagination, creativity, and quick thinking. Ages 3--7. (Jan.)

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Review by School Library Journal Review

PreS-Gr 1--While waiting at home for the rain to end, dark-haired Anna and blond Kiki get tired of their usual indoor games, such as hide-and-seek and snakes and ladders. To keep boredom at bay, Kiki suggests they play "The Think-Ups." "All you have to do is think up a Think-Up and it will appear!" With this simple rule, the girls take turns summoning imaginary animals. Bunnies, koalas, octopuses, and even a giant moose appear and entertain the children while wreaking humorous havoc around the house. When the chaos crescendos, Kiki conveniently thinks. "All Gone," and peace is seemingly restored, the sun comes out, and the girls head outside with the promise of more high jinks from a "you-can't-catch-me-lion." Alexander's sweetly cartoonish illustrations are very funny, though neither they nor the text resolves the ambiguity of whether the entire mess was real or imaginary, nor is there parental presence of any kind. VERDICT Not an essential purchase, this delightful and imaginative romp will have readers giggling and wishing for Think-Ups of their own.--Yelena Voysey, formerly at Pickering Educational Lib., Boston Univ.

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Two children stuck inside on a rainy day use their imaginations to stave off boredom. Having exhausted their usual indoor activities, small gal pals Kiki and Anna stare out the wet window despondently. But then, in a stroke of inspiration, Kiki invents a special game: "We could play the Think-Ups!" The rules are simple: Think of something and it will appear. Anna is skeptical at first, but soon the girls are conjuring up bunnies, octopuses, koalas, and even a moose! They initially revel in their wild animal apparitions until the mischievous menagerie takes over the house, making a mess in the kitchen and causing general chaos. Luckily, the children think up a way to restore order just as the sun comes out…but their imaginary troubles aren't over yet! Alexander's exuberant text lends itself perfectly to reading aloud, with playful verbal flourishes such as "wriggling, giggling octopuses." The digital illustrations, executed in a mostly pastel palette, have a hand-drawn feel and effectively convey the hilarity, charm, and unbridled energy of young children's play. Kiki and Anna's rapidly shifting emotional extremes are dead-on and offer additional points for discussion. Occasional wordless spreads give readers a chance to take a breath during the make-believe mayhem and soak in all the details. Attentive readers will notice clues peppered throughout that foreshadow some of the hijinks. All characters are light-skinned. (This book was reviewed digitally.) A deftly executed homage to the power children possess to imagine away a dreary day. (Picture book. 4-7) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.