Bound To Stay Bound

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School Library Journal - 11/01/2013 Gr 1–3—Alex is clearly too old for the sappy picture book that his Gran Gran gives him for his birthday. Originally entitled Birthday Bunny, about a bunny who thinks his friends have forgotten his birthday, he spices it up by changing the title to Battle Bunny and making the main character an evil carrot-eating mastermind that is trying to take over the world. The boy also changes the dialogue frequently. For example, the crossed out text says, "Everybody needs a Special Thinking Place where they can think their best thoughts. Where is your Special Thinking Place?" The new, much-improved and hilarious text reads, "Everybody needs an Evil Plan Place where they can launch their Evil Plans. Where is your Evil Plan Place?" The tweaks to the oil and pencil illustrations, such as adding an eye patch and WWF wresting belt to the bunny, are priceless. This is a perfect book to give independent readers who are looking for something a little different. The unique layout and design will inspire creativity in readers.—Brooke Rasche, La Crosse Public Library, WI - Copyright 2013 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.

Bulletin for the Center... - 12/01/2013 Every librarian and teacher has seem them, those saccharine early reader series whose desperate inclusion of Things Kids Like is merely a crutch for the didactic intent of helping little ones learn sight words and to sound out more complex vocabulary. So has Alexander, whose Gran Gran has given him a copy of Birthday Bunny—whose “worn” back cover reveals that it’s part of the “Adorable Bunny Collection”—for his own special day. The simple, schoolbook story of a bunny who’s sad because he believes all his friends have forgotten his birthday doesn’t appeal to Alex, though, so he’s spiced it up with plot twists and illustrations all his own. Scratching out words from the printed text and replacing them with his own boisterous vocabulary, Alex has chosen instead to make this book about the Battle Bunny, who decides that his birthday is the perfect time to put his Evil Plan into action. Battle Bunny forges ahead and destroys each of his enemies (formerly Birthday Bunny’s friends): Sgt. Squirrel of the Robot Police Force is taken down when his robot killer bees (“Ready to sting your butt and save the forest!!”) are no match for Battle Bunny’s chainsaws, and Shaolin Bear and Ninja Turtle’s 1,103 fighting styles are demolished by Battle Bunny’s 1,104. A scribbled-in president (who’s sometimes Barack Obama, sometimes Abraham Lincoln) pleads with a doodle Alex to save the day; Alex obliges by revealing that today is also his birthday, and Battle Bunny concedes: “[Alex], You have [defeat]surprised me with the greatest birthday present[owers].” It’s a metafictional farce, but it’s wickedly subversive in all the ways that will appeal to kids, and it’s remarkably realistic in capturing the inevitable graffiti of childhood. The stilted cutesiness of Birthday Bunny is an amusing parody in itself, but Alex’s emendation choices are hilariously effective as he deftly repurposes initial letters, grammatical markers, and short chunks of text to tell a very different kind of story (“‘[F]Greetings[ze], Bunny,’ said Badger. ‘[Stop] Why are you [c]hopping so [m]sadly?[!] Today is special day.’[you face El Tejon, the greatest wrestler!!]”). The youthful over-the-top hyperbole captures all of the clichés of kids’ action tales with gloriously overstated comedy. The resulting text is thus an honest reflection of the ways kids interact with books—in a way that’s accessible to kids themselves—as well as a complexly layered work of comic genius. The oil and pencil illustrations of Birthday Bunny are blandly adorable, with splotchy lines and muted colors reminiscent of vintage basal reader illustrations here set appropriately against pages seemingly yellowed with age. Contrast that art with Alex’s additions, which are scratchy doodles in thick black pencil, complete with speech bubbles and comics-style onomatopoeia, that transform the wide-eyed, floppy-eared, and button-nosed bunny into a fierce dictator, complete with angry eyebrows, an eye patch, a scar on his ear, and a World Wrestling Federation belt. Alex has left no stone unturned—or un-defaced—in this world, with even innocent bystanding trees getting marked up with scars or toppled by chainsaw in the wake of Battle Bunny’s path of destruction. By the end of the book, Alex’s narrative requirements make Birthday Bunny all but illegible, with one page’s text block near the end of the book completely marked out, replacing Birthday Bunny’s moping with the president’s interaction with Alex in a graphic narrative. This is an example of exactly how kids are told not to interact with their books—and that’s what makes it so effective. Alex’s gleeful disregard for the inanity of Birthday Bunny belies a deep engagement with the words in the book, an active participation with the structures of literacy that acts as a rebellious model for kids just starting to read on their own. And who can’t help but giggle at a cry of “Time to get it on, carrot breath!”? This is, then, sure to be an early reader that’s also endlessly entertaining and that will stand up to multiple readings as viewers find more of Alex’s hidden gems. Just be on the lookout in library returns for budding artists who’ve been inspired to try graffiti of their own. (See p. 239 for publication information.) Thaddeus Andracki, Reviewer - Copyright 2013 The Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois.

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