Ploof

Ben Clanton, 1988-

Book - 2023

"Ploof is a puffy cloud who's a little lonely — but now you're here, and the fun can begin! Can you help Ploof overcome their shyness? Play pretend? Make Ploof laugh with your funny faces, find their hiding spot, give them a high five! Full of imaginative and interactive fun, each page of this perfect book for preschoolers offers a chance to play. By following cues to say hello, clap, blow, shake, wave or make a funny face, young readers will be delighted to see the effects of their actions on Ploof. They'll learn social-emotional skills like empathy, encouragement and kindness through Ploof's emotional journey — and, along the way, they'll learn how to be a fantastic friend!" --

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jE/Clanton
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Subjects
Genres
Nature fiction
Picture books
Published
[Toronto] : Tundra Books, an imprint of Tundra Book Group [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Ben Clanton, 1988- (author)
Other Authors
Andy Chou Musser (author)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 23 cm
Issued also in electronic format
ISBN
9781774881927
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

This interactive picture book featuring a cute cloud is a cross between Charles Green Shaw's It Looked like Spilt Milk and Christie Matheson's Tap the Magic Tree. Throughout the story, Ploof the cloud displays a range of emotions--from happy to shy, excited to scared--as it changes shapes (e.g., star, Swiss cheese, submarine). Child readers will be invited to say hello, clap, make a silly face, blow, high-five, hug, and play hide-and-seek before waving goodbye to Ploof at the end. The simple, cartoonlike illustrations--done in powdered graphite, erasers, and pencil and colored digitally--keep the reader's focus on the cloud's eyes and expressions. The text is presented in a clear, easy-to-read font and offers encouraging "feedback" to children for successfully responding. Great for both storytime and one-on-one reading, engaging young children with simple actions and giving opportunities to identify many shapes and feelings. Recommended for all picture-book collections.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this interactive picture book, Clanton and Chou Musser give readers a chance to practice empathic responses through engagement with an emotive cloud named Ploof. "This is Ploof. Ploof is feeling lonely. Can you say hello?" beginning lines encourage, and a page turn reveals that "Yay! Ploof is happy to see you." Other prompts request help in supporting Ploof through a momentary bout of shyness and in cheering the cloud when its raindrop-like tears start to fall. As the playful cloud morphs shapes, amid other activities, it emits phrases including "Oof!" and "Whoosh!" Following a playful game of hide-and-go-seek, the literary playdate comes to a close with a high-five, a wave, and a hug. "Thanks for being such a fantastic friend," the narrator models. Powdered graphite, eraser, and pencil artwork employs sky-blue digital coloring in this friendly volume that makes social interaction look easy. Ages 2--5. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A lonely little cloud named Ploof needs your help. This interactive picture book directly addresses children, encouraging participation with Ploof. When Ploof is feeling shy, readers are told to clap for encouragement. Similarly, when the cloud "runs…out of steam," readers are asked to "blow softly on Ploof" to "puff Ploof back up." The illustrations are simple and clear. For the most part, the recto of each spread includes text set against a white background, while the verso depicts the cloud against a soft, sky-blue background--an effect that focuses readers' attention on Ploof. This little white cotton ball of a cloud has an expressive face and large, oval-shaped eyes, used to great effect to convey Ploof's shyness, weariness, and worry. The seek-and-find pages might be the most fun; readers must spot Ploof, who's hiding among a field of sheep and in a sky full of kites. Interactive books like this are popular for a reason, and this one fits the mold rather than breaking it. Adults and caregivers looking for a sweet, reader-facing read-aloud will be satisfied with this one; those seeking something nonformulaic need to look elsewhere. (This book was reviewed digitally.) Fluffy and fun, as expected. (Picture book. 2-5) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.