Hap-pea Halloween

Keith Baker, 1953-

Book - 2025

A group of happy peas think and scheme, deciding what they should be for Halloween.

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Subjects
Genres
Stories in rhyme
Picture books
JUV017030
JUV009000
JUV019000
Juvenile works
Novels
Pictorial works
Children's stories Pictorial works
Histoires rimées
Published
New York, NY : Beach Lane Books 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Keith Baker, 1953- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged): color illustrations ; 21 cm
Audience
Ages 4-8.
Grades K-1.
ISBN
9781665940269
9781665940276
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Baker's lively legumes return for a Halloween adventure. In lightly rhyming text, an unseen narrator proposes costume ideas: "A wicked witch with a pointy hat, / a ghost, / a goblin, / or the witch's cat? / A skeleton with a cane to tap. / Or a flying, flapping, vampire bat!" The suggestions continue, riffing on classic monsters, children's stories likePeter Pan, and fairy-tale characters such as Rapunzel and Goldilocks. The peas could dress up as animals, Albert Einstein, or "a centipede with fifty friends-- // that's a hundred feet from end to end!" On several spreads, the peas are dwarfed by large-scale lettered phrases like "October 31." Using ladders, they carve hulking pumpkins with saws, relying on slings and ropes to remove pulp and carrying seeds and harvested chunks away in wheelbarrows. Baker uses the peas' roundness to their advantage when outfitting them in costumes; one masquerades as an "evil blue" eyeball, others as the planets Earth and Saturn. Many don headgear like flower bonnets or the Statue of Liberty's crown. A poignant bit of text also gently suggests that eschewing costumes is just fine, too: "Or be yourself… // a little green pea!" Jack-o'-lanterns glow yellow and orange against dark blue-violet spreads as the costumed, treat-seeking peas hit the neighborhood on Halloween night. An enjoyably spooky outing starring a team of diminutive, endlessly inventive veggies.(Picture book. 3-7) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.