Slightly edgy, highly detailed comics-style art will have readers poring over the pages of Monroe's (illustrator of Totally Uncool) latest. Chico Bon Bon, a monkey, loves to build and fix things with his tools. An early picture of the monkey nonchalantly modeling his brilliantly complex tool belt, its contents neatly labeled on white space, gives a clue to the upcoming daffiness: "screwdriver/ nutdriver/ nutcracker/ squeegee/ ouija/ planer/ strainer/ grease container." The story itself, a clichéd affair about an organ grinder who abducts Chico and Chico's subsequent use of his tools to escape, gets its oomph from the art. Laid out in panels, some numbered, some boxed; laid out in loops; arranged as vignettes; or composed like a maze, the illustrations command a reader's attention. Chico, looks sophisticated-he's a grown-up cousin of Julius the sock monkey. Look past the jacket; not only gadget jockeys will enjoy this visually polished tale. Ages 4-8. (Mar.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Both my son and daughter have the ability to turn everyday objects into tools that create, build and occasionally make messes the size of Texas. Our spatula has been a screwdriver, our whisk has been a drill, and even a tube of toothpaste was once a bottle of calk. However, that last one I had to quickly remove […]