★ 10/08/2018
The girl with the bright-green frog umbrella who narrates this tightly focused story has invented tales about her building’s residents based on the distinctive appearance of their doors. The first has several locks and a surveillance camera. “That apartment belongs to a family of thieves,” the girl announces; the apartment, revealed in a page turn, contains a symphony of luxurious museum pieces, and the family is dressed all in black, with face masks. The door on floor two is “always surrounded by muddy footprints.” A gardener? No. “That is the home of an old explorer and his pet tiger.” Each family enterprise is more unlikely than the next, and the spreads burst with appropriate domestic detritus; a vampire seamster’s apartment (floor four) is littered with notions and art deco furniture. The girl’s own apartment, by contrast, has ordinary furniture and an ordinary set of parents. Or does it? Tsarfati (An After Bedtime Story) offers accomplished execution, sureness of line, and restrained, urbane humor. Her story celebrates both imaginative power and the way great imaginations sometimes miss what’s closest to them. Ages 4–8. (Jan.)
**STARRED REVIEW** "This book is one delightful, imaginative reveal after another, ending with a fabulous double-twist chuckle. The text is simple and elegant, supported by absolutely charming images, and it’s icing on the cake that the illustrations are so internationally inclusive . . . The pages warrant long, wondrous examinations and afford readers almost endless satisfaction in the tiny discoveries awaiting them."
**STARRED REVIEW** "Tsarfati (An After Bedtime Story) offers accomplished execution, sureness of line, and restrained, urbane humor. Her story celebrates both imaginative power and the way great imaginations sometimes miss what’s closest to them."—Publishers Weekly
**STARRED REVIEW** "Tsarfati (An After Bedtime Story) offers accomplished execution, sureness of line, and restrained, urbane humor. Her story celebrates both imaginative power and the way great imaginations sometimes miss what’s closest to them."—Publishers Weekly
**STARRED REVIEW** "This book is one delightful, imaginative reveal after another, ending with a fabulous double-twist chuckle. The text is simple and elegant, supported by absolutely charming images, and it’s icing on the cake that the illustrations are so internationally inclusive . . . The pages warrant long, wondrous examinations and afford readers almost endless satisfaction in the tiny discoveries awaiting them."—Booklist
**STARRED REVIEW** "This book is one delightful, imaginative reveal after another, ending with a fabulous double-twist chuckle. The text is simple and elegant, supported by absolutely charming images, and it’s icing on the cake that the illustrations are so internationally inclusive . . . The pages warrant long, wondrous examinations and afford readers almost endless satisfaction in the tiny discoveries awaiting them."—Booklist
"A closing spread undermines her earlier statement about her "boring " parents by depicting them as superheroes. This fantastic twist reintroduces the possibility that anyone might reside behind the neighbors' doors, after all. Delightfully ambiguous and recursive"—Kirkus Reviews
"A closing spread undermines her earlier statement about her "boring " parents by depicting them as superheroes. This fantastic twist reintroduces the possibility that anyone might reside behind the neighbors' doors, after all. Delightfully ambiguous and recursive"—Kirkus Reviews
"The surprise ending in this zany and imaginative picture book is sure to have young readers going back to reread and look for clues."—School Library Journal
"The surprise ending in this zany and imaginative picture book is sure to have young readers going back to reread and look for clues."—School Library Journal
**STARRED REVIEW** "This book is one delightful, imaginative reveal after another, ending with a fabulous double-twist chuckle. The text is simple and elegant, supported by absolutely charming images, and it’s icing on the cake that the illustrations are so internationally inclusive . . . The pages warrant long, wondrous examinations and afford readers almost endless satisfaction in the tiny discoveries awaiting them."
12/01/2018
K-Gr 3—A young girl lives in an apartment building full of interesting characters, or so she thinks. From a family of thieves and a jungle explorer to a family of acrobats and a sewing vampire, the building is teeming with life. Each floor has a separate apartment with a unique door that sets it apart. The young girl lives on the seventh floor, her plain gray door marked with a simple plant and welcome mat. She thinks her parents are boring, but she is unaware of what they do once she falls asleep. The surprise ending in this zany and imaginative picture book is sure to have young readers going back to reread and look for clues. Each page is an attention grabber because of the vibrant colors and elaborate illustrations. The eccentricities of the cast of characters are compelling and readers will linger on each scene to absorb each intricate detail. The main character's vivid imagination is brilliantly reflected in the bold manner in which the illustrations are presented. The stark white pages that show each apartment's entry are a sharp contrast to the imagery of each dwelling's interior, again highlighting the power of imagination. VERDICT A unique and vibrant choice that artfully displays the dynamism of the imagination.—Amy Shepherd, St. Anne's Episcopal School, Middleton, DE
2018-09-17
An inquisitive child speculates about the neighbors' lives in this lively outing, translated from Hebrew.
The first spread depicts a child narrator (coded in cartoon-style, digital illustrations as feminine with long, red hair in a ponytail) approaching a building. The accompanying text reads, "I live in a building that is seven stories high," and a page turn shows her going inside on the verso. The facing recto depicts seven variously styled mailboxes that correspond with the front doors of each apartment she'll pass while walking upstairs and bolsters her assertion that each door is "slightly different." Those differences are, in fact, great: They're all different colors; some are ornately decorated, while others are plain; and each has a clue that inspires the child to imagine the apartment's inhabitants. It's never confirmed whether her visions of neighbors as masked thieves, an explorer, acrobats, a vampire, a pirate and his mermaid spouse, or musicians (this last spread is the only one to, thus far, clearly depict people of color) are imaginary or are part of a fantastic reality. When her mother (who shares her paper-white coloring) and father (who appears Asian) put her to bed, readers may note that her bedroom is filled with details corresponding with her visons of her neighbors. So maybe she was just imagining them? But then a closing spread undermines her earlier statement about her "boring" parents by depicting them as superheroes. This fantastic twist reintroduces the possibility that anyone might reside behind the neighbors' doors, after all.
Delightfully ambiguous and recursive. (Picture book. 3-7)