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Library | Call Number | Status |
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Searching... Silver Falls Library | JP ROSENTHAL | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... McMinnville Public Library | Rosenthal | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Newberg Public Library | PLAY ROSENTHAL | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Salem Main Library | JP Rosenthal | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Woodburn Public Library | E Rosenthal | Searching... Unknown |
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Summary
Summary
The irresistible stars of I Must Have Bobo! return in another everyday adventure in domestic disharmony!
Willy wants to write a storybook starring Bobo--and act out revenge fantasies on Earl--but Earl keeps wrecking the story (hence the desire to act out revenge fantasies!). Quit it, Earl...and stop stealing Bobo!
But sometimes it only takes a small thing to realize that even sworn enemies have something in common. For instance: Bobo and Earl both have very snakey tails! Is that a truce? Don't count on it.
Author Notes
Eileen and Marc Rosenthal enjoy working together (and even sharing)--unlike Willy and Earl. I Must Have Bobo! was their first collaborative project and Eileen's picture book debut. Marc is also the illustrator of Alison McGhee's Making a Friend . Eileen and Marc live with their family in the Berkshires.
Reviews (5)
School Library Journal Review
K-Gr 3-Poor Willy just wants to read a dinosaur book with his beloved toy monkey. But, as in I MUST Have Bobo (Atheneum, 2011), Earl the cat just won't leave them alone. When the book proves disappointingly sedate, Willy takes matters into his own hands and decides to write his own jungle adventure-with lots of danger to save Bobo from. As he narrates their imaginary exploits, Earl pesters and tries to steal the toy. With clever problem-solving, Willy uses his story to express his anger and desire for retaliation against Earl. Imagining the feline being devoured by snakes provides catharsis for Willy, and though their relationship remains the same he feels empowered enough to accept Earl as he is. There is no pat ending. Kids will relate to having someone in their life who just plain bugs them-whether pet, sibling, cousin, or friend. The charming humor in the Sunday-funnies-style illustrations perfectly enhances the story, and the art (not to mention Willy's feisty personality) is reminiscent of Bill Watterson's "Calvin and Hobbes" (Andrews McMeel). A first purchase.-Anna Haase Krueger, Antigo Public Library, WI (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
The war wages on! In this charming sequel to I Must Have Bobo! (2010), Willy and his pet cat, Earl, are still having trouble coexisting at home, and stuffed monkey Bobo is caught in the middle. All three characters fully inhabit their identities. Willy is emphatic and mercurial, excited about the jungle adventure he's drawing ("And we have a tent!" he shouts gleefully) and irritated at Earl's intrusions. Earl does as cats do, sometimes insisting on being in the middle of the action, at other times drifting into the background or tentatively exploring what Willy is up to. Bobo, inanimate, is just along for the ride. A joyful tribute to imagination and everyday domestic dramas. Ages 3-6. Agent: Holly McGhee, Pippin Properties. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Horn Book Review
In this sequel to I Must Have Bobo, Willy, who only has eyes for his stuffed-animal monkey, tries to shake his annoying, ever-present housecat Earl. When Earl doesn't take the hint, Willy turns to his crayons and fantasizes revenge, but this act has a sublimely amusing repercussion. The art recalls early Charles M. Schulz, but self-assured Willy is no Charlie Brown. (c) Copyright 2012. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Booklist Review
Earl the cat, Bobo the stuffed monkey, and Willy the towheaded boy are back. Last time out (I Must Have Bobo!, 2011), Bobo was lost. Now he is in peril, as Willy writes a jungle tale with Bobo as the reluctant hero. Throughout, Earl desperately tries to get their attention by doing everything from jumping on Willy's head to infiltrating (and ruining) the tent Willy has constructed. A clever ending finally makes Willy sit up and take notice. The deceptively simple artwork is layered for fun and works in tandem with the deadpan text. This is one that's enjoyable for both readers and listeners.--Cooper, Ilene Copyright 2010 Booklist
New York Review of Books Review
"AS my ideas get bigger," my 6-year-old son once told me, "you get smaller." Needless to say, this was a startling assessment for a parent to hear. It also reveals the utter stab in the dark an author makes when writing a children's book, trying to guess backward at just how knowing young readers might be. It seems, in light of my son's mystical warning, all too easy to underestimate your audience. Describing the creative process to children then, as these four new picture books do, seems an even more daunting challenge. Creativity, after all, is one of the things that kids tend to have in boisterous abundance, unlike their weary elders, who struggle to gain access to what they once tapped into freely. But the authors of these books - "The Obstinate Pen," "Penny and Her Song," "Magritte's Marvelous Hat" and "I'll Save You Bobo!" - have wisely finetuned their narratives, counseling children in the art of harnessing creativity and aiming it with purpose. "The Obstinate Pen" by Frank W. Dormer, the author and illustrator of "Socks-quatch," is the most original of the lot. In telling the clever story of a pen with a mind of its own, Dormer bridges the gap between youthful precocity and adult sophistication, and makes a very good point about artistic inspiration along the way. When Uncle Flood unwraps his new pen and tries to put down his first sentence, "The following story is all true," the pen instead forces him to write, "You have a BIG nose." (And indeed the Great Pyramid of Giza does seem to be rising from the middle of poor Uncle Flood's face.) From this point on, the irreverent pen travels from one grown-up to the next - all whimsically drawn in ink and watercolor - impelling each one to write something more honest, and frequently more insulting, than the writer intended. These impish remarks are certain to elicit gleeful belly laughs from young readers throughout. At last, when the opinionated pen meets its match - a child who, unlike the adults before him, both knows and is not afraid of his true creative impulses - it surrenders with grace. Kevin Henkes is the creator of such famous mice as Lilly ("Julius, the Baby of the World," "Lilly's Big Day" and "Lilly's Purple Plastic Purse"); Wemberly ("Wemberly Worried"); and Chrysanthemum (who stars in the book and short film - charmingly narrated by Meryl Streep - of the same name). Henkes, in short, knows mice. In "Penny and Her Song," his latest, a small mouse learns the importance of instinct and timing. Penny has a song to sing, one she wrote herself, but her parents are worried she'll wake her baby siblings. When she is relegated to her bedroom, Penny discovers that there is no pleasure in performing without an audience. Finally, when her parents, well meaning (as so many of the adults in Henkes's fictional world are, always conveying a kind of genial authority), allow Penny to put on her show, the whole family join in, donning costumes and dancing along. These are the book's best illustrations: Henkes's reassuringly familiar mice, with their happy pointy faces, giving it all they've got, sunglasses, feather boas and all. There is no trace of irreverence - just pure innocent fun. IN "Magritte's Marvelous Hat," D. B. Johnson, best known for his series of children's books inspired by the life of Henry David Thoreau, introduces the concept of Surrealism to young readers by telling a fantastical story about the Belgian artist René Magritte. In this book, however, Magritte appears as a dog. (Johnson also transforms Thoreau into a bear.) In a story seemingly fashioned after Albert Lamorisse's classic short film "The Red Balloon," Magritte the dog discovers a magical black bowler much like the one often portrayed in the artist's paintings. Magritte and the hat become fast friends, wandering playfully through the city streets. As long as the hat hovers over his head, it emboldens Magritte as a painter: "His brush danced and the colors sang." The book's greatest appeal, however, is its appropriately wondrous artwork - large mixed-media illustrations with dreamlike details modeled after Magritte's own paintings (an orange obscuring a shopkeeper's face, the ocean reflected from a doorway). On some pages, Johnson has added a clear plastic overlay with just enough illustration to alter the preceding page's picture, along with the narrative, when it is flipped. The resulting trick effects, provoking a sense of mystery from the everyday, pay fitting tribute to the artist brought to life in the book's pages. "I'll Save You Bobo!," written by Eileen Rosenthal and illustrated by her husband, Marc Rosenthal, is the stand-alone sequel to "I Must Have Bobo!" in which the same three characters - Willy, a boy who looks as if he could be a cousin of Ludwig Bemelmans's Madeline, with his big round head and primary-colored outfits; Bobo the stuffed monkey; and Earl the mischievous cat - act out the drama of trying to live peaceably under one roof. In both books, Willy must fend off Earl and his furtive efforts to snatch the monkey. In "I'll Save You Bobo!" Willy wrestles with his emotions, particularly his rage at Earl, by writing books about the three of them getting trapped in a jungle with poisonous mushrooms, menacing tigers and an enormous green snake that in the end eats guess-who for dinner? Yes, Earl. The story sets the world right for Willy - that is, until Earl absconds with Bobo again in real life. My son was right. As children learn and grow, the adults in their lives shrink in proportion, even if only to their rightful size. But there is no such calculation for creativity, a power we're all granted so long as we can find our way to it and, when we're lucky, let it out. Nell Casey is the editor of "The Journals of Spalding Gray" and "Unholy Ghost: Writers on Depression." She is a former books columnist for Cookie magazine.