Sometimes I grumblesquinch

Rachel Vail

Book - 2022

Exploring the key social emotional skills needed to navigate complicated feelings, this sweet and touching story follows Katie Honors, a nice kid who isn't able to hold in her feelings about her brother, as she learns an important lesson.

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1 / 3 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jE/Vail Due Jan 13, 2025
Children's Room jE/Vail Due Jan 20, 2025
Children's Room jE/Vail Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
New York : Orchard Books, an imprint of Scholastic Inc 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Rachel Vail (author)
Other Authors
Hyewon Yum (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"A big feelings book."
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9781338751161
Contents unavailable.
Review by School Library Journal Review

PreS-Gr 2--Self-described "really nice kid" Katie Honors always aims to please. Polite, well-behaved, and flexible, she earns compliments from her parents: "Katie is such a pleasure." The reality beneath this veneer of perfection, of course, is a range of emotions, positive and negative. Her toddler brother Chuck has a knack for provoking her in small ways that her mother and father either overlook or minimize with platitudes: "You don't mind, do you?" and "Chuck loves you!" Since her appearance as the protagonist of Vail's Sometimes I'm Bombaloo, Katie has learned to suppress her feelings by "grumblesquinching," her idiosyncratic term for bottling up anger and sadness inside. After her pent-up frustration finally explodes in the form of a tantrum, she fears that she has irreparably damaged her parents' opinion of her. To her relief, her mother responds not with judgment but with warm understanding--she is accepted, anger and all. Vail creates a strikingly honest portrait of family relationships, sensitively probing the all-too-common adult habit of using praise to avoid uncomfortable but necessary emotional dialogue. Yum's bright, expressive colored pencil drawings cleverly externalize the progression of Katie's emotional response: as she loses her composure, strands of her hair begin to float up into sinister tentacles, and the image on her shirt subtly shifts from a rainbow to a storm cloud. VERDICT This tender, insightful exploration of childhood emotion and respectful parenting is an important purchase for all collections.--Jonah Dragan

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Katie is a girl who is always nice, polite, and agreeable--well, almost always. Everyone says that Katie, who has straight dark hair, dot eyes, and a big curve of a smile, is a pleasure. She's a good sport, helps with her little brother, Chuck, and makes her parents proud. But she has a secret: Sometimes she grumblesquinches. That's when "my insides tighten and I think mean thoughts." It's when she wishes her brother didn't wake her up or take her seat. It's when she wishes she didn't have a little brother at all. Even when Chuck puts his hand right into her bowl of cereal, she grumblesquinches her bad feelings down. Katie's mother, who also has straight dark hair, and her father, who has a ruddy complexion and brown hair, think Chuck is just being adorable. But when Chuck tries to hug her with his milky hands and buttery face, ruining her new rainbow shirt, her feelings cannot be grumblesquinched any longer, and she explodes: "Chuck ruins everything!" Her pent-up anger pours out, and then Katie is scared. What if her parents don't think she's a pleasure anymore? Yum's sweet colored-pencil illustrations perfectly convey Katie's personality and emotional landscape and deftly work with the text to portray the complexities of her inner life. Readers who can relate will be reassured by the loving response from Katie's mother. (This book was reviewed digitally.) Sensitive and emotionally true, a comforting portrayal of big emotions. (author's and illustrator's notes) (Picture book. 4-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.