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Hardcover: 40 pages
ISBN-10: 0061827258
ISBN-13: 978-0061827259
Ã¥ Å©±â: 23.7 cm x 23.6 cm
[ ¿µ¹® ¼Æò ]
Book Description
Maggie likes being a kitty. But sometimes that¡¯s not enough. Sometimes a girl has to be super.
One little girl transforms herself over and over in this inventive picture book from the bestselling author and illustrator of Not a Box, Antoinette Portis. Once again, Portis shows us that children make ordinary life fun using their imaginations.
Publishers Weekly
Talk about a triple threat: with the help of a well-stocked dress-up trunk, Portis¡¯s (Kindergarten Diary) narrator, Maggie, cumulatively culls the best qualities from three classic pretend-play personas (cat, superhero, princess) to create one awesome icon. Donning ears and a tail empowers Maggie to communicate with ¡°Meows¡± and drink from a bowl; by adding a cape and stripping down to her skivvies, she can sidestep any obligations to feline napping and ¡°look for people to rescue.¡± And with the addition of bling and a long dress, she can eschew the drudgeries of superherodom (¡°Super Kitties have to open jars for everybody in the whole world¡±) and bask in the adoration of her subjects (aka, her two little brothers and the family cat). Portis¡¯s genial, direct prose and bold, playfully distilled drawings have always been a good match for stories of imagination; readers will admire not only Maggie¡¯s powers of fantasy, but also her aplomb at moving the pretend-play goalposts to suit her fancies. This is one girl who really knows how to have it all.
School Library Journal
Princess Super Kitty, who imagines herself as a cat, wears ears and a tail to enhance her look. Her mother indulges her by letting her speak in "meows," lap milk from a bowl, and eat her peanut butter and banana sandwich under the table. At nap time, she becomes Super Kitty, rescuing her baby brother from a tumble down the stairs and using her X-ray vision to view her older brother's underwear. Next she adds princess gear and becomes Princess Super Kitty. Again, both of her brothers and her mother play along with the moment. When bath time is announced, she becomes Water Lily Hula Porpoise Princess Super Kitty of the Sea, complete with a grass skirt, a seashell bikini top, and a big crown. The last scene shows a bathtub with the top part of the crown and flippers visible and the text says, "Meow." The colors in the illustrations are flat and contained within thick black lines. There is minimal background, but certainly enough to tell the story. This book is a gem. All small children would love to use their imaginations in such a fun way.
Kirkus Reviews
A lively little girl named Maggie explains a series of transformations as she goes through her day.
"There are girls who are regular girls. But not me...Because today I am a kitty!" Sporting cat ears and tail, she explains that "Kitties are cuter than regular people," and says only "Meow" when spoken to. At nap time, although "[k]itties like to take lots of naps.... not me. Because...I am a Super Kitty." She leaps from the bed, the chair and the couch in a yellow cape and pink boots and demonstrates super strength (enough to lift a toy fire truck overhead and to open tricky jars). Donning dress, slippers, beads and a crown, Princess Super Kitty ("someone you obey") entertains her two siblings until bathtime. Beside the tub, decked out in flippers and tropical costume (but tail still attached), Water Lily Hula Porpoise Princess Super Kitty of the Sea makes her grand appearance. This girl is bouncy, delightful and not to be easily typed or contained. Bold lines and solid colors—not overly dominated by pink—surrounded by plenty of empty space keep the focus firmly on the girl and her props.
Readers and listeners both bold and retiring will find much to like in this charming depiction of a child with a strong sense of self and confidence in her imaginative makeovers. |
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