Something good

Kenneth Kraegel

Book - 2025

"Blah. Nothing good ever happens to me. This morning a little girl wakes up with a chicken on her head. (Ouch.) Then she finds worms in her cereal (after she's had a few bites-yuck!). Then she realizes, too late, that her boots are full of mud. Ack! Then her best friend ignores her, a big hole appears where it wasn't yesterday, and it starts to rain-cold rain, of course. Could this day get any worse? When a mysterious gift shows up out of nowhere, wrapped in a bow, the girl dares to wonder if it could finally be something good. Get ready for a high-flying tale as the beloved creator of Wild Honey from the Moon brings his signature deadpan humor, quirky charm, and appealingly simple text to a fantastical adventure sure to turn... even the worst days around"--

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Children's Room New Shelf Show me where

jE/Kraegel
0 / 2 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room New Shelf jE/Kraegel (NEW SHELF) Due Apr 27, 2025
Children's Room New Shelf jE/Kraegel (NEW SHELF) Due Apr 26, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
Somerville, Massachusetts : Candlewick Press 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Kenneth Kraegel (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 26 cm
ISBN
9781536229448
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

This very bad day begins in bed, when a tousle-haired tot wakes to the beady gaze of a chicken perched on her forehead. Worms in her cereal give way to boots brimming with mud and a distracted best friend with an uninterested gaze. Each new indignity elicits a resigned "blah" as the hapless heroine falls into a hole and is trapped by a hairy mastodon. Opening an unexpected present yields more disappointment, but when a chilling downpour prompts her to pull on these dispiriting gift socks, her fortune flips. Finally, she can exult "something good!" before soaring joyfully upward in a sunny sky. Even better, this happy magic magnifies when shared: reunited, the friends each sport one green sock, taking fanciful flights with circling chickens, above rejoicing worms and a trumpeting mastodon. With quirky, delightful characters in an expressionistic world of whimsically aware vegetation and cheerfully empathetic creatures, prolific creator Kraegel's distinctive, somewhat naive-style art enhances the humorously relatable experience of just "being in a mood." A fresh addition to the enduring canon of bad-day books.

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

"This morning I woke up with a chicken on my head. Ouch," begins this moody tale about a day that starts off wrong and goes downhill. Next, the child narrator finds worms in their breakfast cereal and realizes, "too late," that their boots are full of mud. "Blah. Nothing good ever happens to me," they say. Spiky watercolor, gouache, and ink artwork from Kraegel (Mushroom Lullaby) signals interior gloom as the pale-skinned youth, sporting a yellow dress, trudges across the pages. Their distracted friend Zoe, portrayed with brown skin, ignores their offer of a hug. The protagonist then falls into a hole, and a hairy mastodon takes a nap over the entrance. Finally, an unexpected present tied with a ribbon and left on the sidewalk contains something so wonderful, so magical, that it transforms everything: "SOMETHING GOOD HAS HAPPENED TO ME!!!" What's more, the gift is easy to make use of with others, and it's more fun that way. Feather-light messages about sharing joys and not assuming the worst accompany this swiftly paced, effervescent comedy with Peanuts vibes. Ages 2--5. Agent: Allison Remcheck, Stimola Literary Studio. (Feb.)

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

Like the hero ofAlexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day, Kraegel's protagonist is having a tough time. Despite a rough morning, the child is holding out hope for "something good." Small, humorous slights and annoyances add up for the young narrator (who has light skin and straight, dark hair), leading the child to declare, "Blah. Nothing good ever happens to me." Quirky incidents ("I woke up with a chicken on my head"; "I realized too late that my boots were full of mud") give way to the absurd when the child falls into a deep hole, which a "hairy mastodon" sits over. Expressive illustrations rendered in colored pencil, gouache, and ink enhance the humor with a cartoon style reminiscent of Michael Emberley's work. The narrative doubles down on its fantastic turn when the protagonist finds a wrapped present on the sidewalk: Although the child is initially disappointed to find it contains socks, they turn out to have magical powers that send the narrator flying through the air.This is the "something good" the protagonist has been waiting for! It only gets better when a friend joins in on the fun, and then, after a while, they pass their good fortune along to another child, "someone who needed the socks more than we did." Filled with humorous twists and turns, something good, indeed, for storytime.(Picture book. 3-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.