Bound To Stay Bound

View MARC Record
 Pretty ugly
 Author: Sedaris, David

 Publisher:  Toon Books (2024)

 Classification: Easy
 Physical Description: [32] p., col. ill., 29 cm

 BTSB No: 795132 ISBN: 9781662665271
 Ages: 5-7 Grades: K-2

 Subjects:
 Personal appearance -- Fiction
 Conduct of life -- Fiction

Price: $23.28

Summary:
Anna Van Ogre's lovely monster face turns into that of a sickeningly adorable, rosy-cheeked little girl--and it's not switching back! Can she find a way to stop looking like an ugly human and regain her gorgeous monstrosity of a face?

 Illustrator: Falconer, Ian

Reviews:
   Kirkus Reviews (+) (01/01/24)
   School Library Journal (00/03/24)
   Booklist (12/01/23)

Full Text Reviews:

School Library Journal - 03/01/2024 K-Gr 2—This seems like a familiar, fractured fairy tale at first glance, but pushes its preternatural premise further with an unexpected and welcome narrative thrust. A family of ogres prizes their ugliness above all else, praising their pig-tailed, pointy-eared, wart-nosed daughter Anna for her poor manners and voracious hunger for hardware (she chomps on nails at dinner). Her most uncouth behavior, in their eyes, is making objectively adorable (or horrifying, depending on viewers' aesthetic sensibilities) porcelain doll-like faces. One day, her face sticks like that, and she's left rosy-cheeked and doe-eyed indefinitely, much to her dismay. After locking herself in the woodshed, she comes to that old chestnut of self-understanding: true beauty is found on the inside. In a flourish straight out of a horror film, she literally turns herself inside out, revealing the hot pink, googly-eyed, globby-brained monster lurking just beneath her saccharine exterior. And that's it! This simple story, clearly quirky from the get-go, still manages to shock in its final turn, so prepare readers to be slightly freaked. In his picture book debut, Sedaris's familiar mix of sentimentality and acerbic wit shines through without coming off as self-indulgent. Falconer's sparse, goofily grotesque illustrations leave large swaths of white space for readers to settle into the story, using a calm, sedate visual style to emphasize the contrast of the book's brash neon finale. VERDICT A slightly freaky fable for young readers eager and ready to leave the usually safe world of pictures books behind.—Emilia Packard - Copyright 2024 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.

View MARC Record
Loading...