Next book

YOUR HOUSE IS NOT JUST A HOUSE

An exuberant paean to creativity.

In this rhyming ode to imagination, a young child moves through the house envisioning fantastical purposes for ordinary objects.

After returning home during a rainstorm, an energetic, brown-skinned child conquers boredom by imagining a series of thrilling scenarios, from teleporting to a planet of robots and cavorting with jungle animals to taking the stage as a musical phenom. By the time the rain has passed, the child has invented a new sport and begins drawing colossal battles with sidewalk chalk (Vikings vs. Martians, anyone?). Artwork created with cut paper and paint sometimes differentiates the imaginative play from reality, as with the transparent, steamy animals that emerge from the child’s bath. At other times, the flights of fancy appear as real as the typical household objects, such as when the kid tumbles across the couch like a professional wrestler defeating a robot opponent. The text also slips back and forth between real and unreal to celebrate all kinds of inventiveness, equating the child’s fantasies with the creative endeavors of the grown-ups, including dancing, painting, and writing. Slant rhymes and trips in the scansion will frustrate some readers; those who commit to the text with the same cheerful abandon as the protagonist will enjoy the reading experience anyway.

An exuberant paean to creativity. (Picture book. 4-8)

Pub Date: May 7, 2024

ISBN: 9780358683445

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Clarion/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Feb. 17, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2024

Categories:
Next book

HANSEL AND GRETEL

Menacing and most likely to appeal to established fans of its co-creators.

Existing artwork from an artistic giant inspires a fairy-tale reimagination by a master of the horror genre.

In King’s interpretation of a classic Brothers Grimm story, which accompanies set and costume designs that the late Sendak created for a 1997 production of Engelbert Humperdinck’s opera, siblings Hansel and Gretel survive abandonment in the woods and an evil witch’s plot to gobble them up before finding their “happily ever after” alongside their father. Prose with the reassuring cadence of an old-timey tale, paired with Sendak’s instantly recognizable artwork, will lull readers before capitalizing on these creators’ knack for injecting darkness into seemingly safe spaces. Gaping faces loom in crevices of rocks and trees, and a gloomy palette of muted greens and ocher amplify the story’s foreboding tone, while King never sugarcoats the peach-skinned children’s peril. Branches with “clutching fingers” hide “the awful enchanted house” of a “child-stealing witch,” all portrayed in an eclectic mix of spot and full-bleed images. Featuring insults that might strike some as harsh (“idiot,” “fool”), the lengthy, dense text may try young readers’ patience, and the often overwhelmingly ominous mood feels more pitched to adults—particularly those familiar with King and Sendak—but an introduction acknowledges grandparents as a likely audience, and nostalgia may prompt leniency over an occasional disconnect between words and art.

Menacing and most likely to appeal to established fans of its co-creators. (Picture book. 4-8)

Pub Date: Sept. 2, 2025

ISBN: 9780062644695

Page Count: 48

Publisher: Harper/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Aug. 15, 2025

Categories:
Next book

BUFFALO FLUFFALO AND PUFFALO

From the Buffalo Fluffalo Story series

An endearing ode to big siblinghood.

A buffalo is disconcerted when his daily routine is disrupted by a newborn.

Kalb begins with the playful rhymes and rhythms she employed in Buffalo Fluffalo (2024). Fluffalo, having learned a lesson in cooperation in his earlier outing, happily cavorts with Ram, Crow, and Prairie Dog before enjoying some thoughtful alone time and then settling down to sleep at dusk. A loud wailing sound wakes him at dawn and continues into daybreak. “‘What could that be?’ huffed tired old Fluffalo. / ‘I’ve said it before—I’ve had enuffalo!’” When he discovers that the sound is coming from a tiny buffalo, he becomes both irate and alarmed. Fortunately, his friends show up and assure him that the little one just needs some time to learn and grow. Fluffalo calms down and admits that the baby is a bit cute—something readers will have already realized, thanks to Kraan’s sweetly imaginative art. In the ensuing pages, Fluffalo mentors the loving Puffalo, including the baby in his daily activities and fielding (some of) Puff’s many questions. Readers with younger siblings will appreciate the subtle acknowledgment that Fluffalo’s new role can be taxing, but overall, the tale affirms the joy of mentoring, while the colorful, stylized art perfectly complements the upbeat verse. It’s easy to imagine an older child reading this story to a younger one at bedtime.

An endearing ode to big siblinghood. (Picture book. 4-8)

Pub Date: Sept. 30, 2025

ISBN: 9780593810309

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Random House Studio

Review Posted Online: June 13, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2025

Close Quickview