All the Hulk feels

Dan Santat

Book - 2025

Me, Hulk, only feel mad Hulk wish can feel other feel. Bruce feel all feel. Bruce lucky. When scientist Bruce Banner starts to feel his emotions getting out of hand, he transforms into his alter ego, the Incredible Hulk! Usually, Hulk is ready to use his anger to smash supervillains, but when everyday moments like pickles on a burger (yuck!) begin triggering Bruce's transformations, Hulk grows frustrated. Will their differences get the better of them? In a silly and heartfelt series of letters exchanged through a pocket in their purple pants, Bruce and Hulk learn to befriend even their most ferocious emotions. This all-new comic picture book from multi-award winning and New York Times bestselling author Dan Santat combines sequential i...llustration panels with traditional picture book elements to create a dazzling new reading experience for budding Marvel fans--and a perfect introduction to comics for the youngest readers.

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Children's Room New Shelf Show me where

jE/Santat
0 / 2 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room New Shelf jE/Santat (NEW SHELF) Due Mar 19, 2026
Children's Room New Shelf jE/Santat (NEW SHELF) Due Mar 22, 2026
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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Dr. Bruce Banner is angry…but at what cost? The title's opening sequence establishes our hero's defining trait--that Dr. Bruce Banner turns into the Incredible Hulk when enraged. But canonic table-setting aside, this tale forgoes the high-flying flash of standard comic-book fare for a more nuanced message. As the Leader, Banner's longtime nemesis, crafts increasingly zany scenarios to elicit rage from his foe, tension builds between Bruce and his muscle-bound counterpart. When is anger worth feeling? And what do you do when you experience it? Written exchanges between the big-feeling scientist and the green behemoth drive the text's dialogue; after each transformation, Bruce or the Hulk finds a note in his pocket. Subversively, rage-monster Hulk challenges Banner's predisposition for fury, encouraging a more holistic approach to defeating evildoers. Anger is a legitimate emotion, per Hulk, but it's one of many. Author/illustrator Santat breathes new life into the nature of comic-book conflict, exploring the emotional stakes of a consciousness divided. And while the topic is heady, the text introduces tools for self-regulation without veering into the didactic. Shifts in perspective may make the narrative challenging for younger readers to follow (events that precipitate angry transformations don't always occur on the page, for instance), but the tale will start a conversation worth having. Readers holding out for a "Hulk smash" won't be disappointed, either. Bruce is light-skinned; other humans are diverse. Supervillainy has been relegated to the subplot, but to a worthwhile end.(Picture book/graphic fiction. 6-9) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.