My head has a bellyache And more nonsense for mischievous kids and immature grown-ups

Chris Harris, 1970-

Book - 2023

"A witty, illustrated collection of humorous (and sometimes even heartwarming) poems and nonsense inspired by the absurdities of everyday life"--

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Subjects
Genres
Humorous poetry
Nonsense verse
Picture books
Published
New York : Little, Brown and Company 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Chris Harris, 1970- (author)
Other Authors
Andrea Tsurumi (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes indexes.
Title from dust jacket; title on title page is obscured.
"0th anniversary edition!!" -- Title page.
Physical Description
192 pages : color illustrations ; 24 cm
Audience
Ages 6+.
ISBN
9780316592598
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

This companion to Harris' I'm Just No Good at Rhyming (2017) kicks off with positive tenacity: "World, watch out! I'm on my way, / And NOTHING's stopping me today!" But the slapstick windup, "I cannot fail! I'll NEVER LOS . . . E / Whoops, I didn't tie my shoes," sets up readers for more hilarity in this mostly rhyming collection of poems. Silly takes on parents, siblings, school, growing up, and other tried-and-true topics for young readers are paired with more outlandish scenarios, from a valentine to someone you don't care about to an elderly caveman complaining about the younger generation's new fire technology ("They sit for hours, every night / Just gazing at the firelight. / They watch a burning log or bush . . . / It's turning all their brains to mush!"). It's not just the subject matter, though, that's sure to bring a laugh. Harris plays with poetic forms, even combining a limerick, haiku, and villanelle into one poem; becomes meta, introducing a book of poems within this book; qualifies page numbers, such as "Blackjack!" for 21 and "The Number That Robinson Sported" for 42; and, from the start, maintains a running gag about a meteor that tears through the poems. His jaunty rhymes will continue to delight the next generation of Shel Silverstein and Jon Scieszka fans.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Horn Book Review

"Mint-chip ice cream (so fantastic!), / Key-lime taffy (so elastic!), / Bags of all-green jelly beans... / Every day I eat my greens!" Come for the funny poems; stay because there's so much to pore over that you can't put this collection down. Harris follows up I'm Just No Good at Rhyming (rev. 11/17, illustrated by Lane Smith) with another meta extravaganza. There are intrusions from, ostensibly, Harris's own children, including a "book-within-a-book." There's the threat of a meteor heading for the pages, which pays off just when you've forgotten about it. Poems appear in footnotes, in the glossary, and spread out among the folios (page 65: "When one becomes senior (traditionally)" / page 66: "A famous old route that's from song and TV"). The green and grayscale digital illustrations are often a critical part of the action, as in the poem where snakes are ignoring their duty to serve as the letter S, with hilarious results. (A few poems are more sincere than silly, providing a chance to catch your breath.) Don't miss the back matter, including but not limited to an index by subject (e.g., "Eek! There's a bug!" and "Paper, with some ink on it") and a "partial list" of "non-books by neither Chris Harris nor Andrea Tsurumi," which includes tricycles, Belgium, and Toy Story 2. (c) Copyright 2024. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A hefty gathering of versified reflections on topics from "dadding" to what the Nail-Clipping Fairy brings at night. Pitched as the companion to I'm Just No Good at Rhyming (2017) but with artwork from Tsurumi rather than Lane Smith, Harris' latest collection focuses on parenting, growing up, and like domestic themes. Along with parental revelations ("Secretly, we do the things we tell you not to do! / We leave our dirty clothes out, and we pick our noses, too") and efforts to recall "My Very First Memory," he explains that "The Place Where the Lost Things Go" is right here, extolls the virtues of "A Big, Comfy Chair and a Brand-New Book," and gleefully reassures children that even in the dark they're never all alone, because…"there are monsters!" Like Smith in the previous volume, Tsurumi plays a maverick role. In addition to a racially diverse cast of wide-eyed youngsters and grown-ups, they depict a set of animal critics regarding a villanelle with disgust and, in the wake of a warning on an early page, a meteor that plunges down later to annihilate an unfortunate poem. Though the adult perspectives and high page count make this a marathon run, protestations notwithstanding, the author is still just fine at rhyming, and that, not to mention his free-wheeling sense of humor, will keep young audiences reading all the way to the (rhymed!) glossary and into the goofy title and subject indexes. Sidesplitting fun throughout for one or a crowd. (Poetry. 6-10) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.