A Zoo In My Shoe

A Zoo In My Shoe
Jason Korsner and Max Low
Graffeg

As you’ll see on the front cover of this book, Jason Korsner has selected seven different wild animals to place in his trainer – sorry, shoe, or it’ll be a no brainer because the first set of rhymes won’t work.

The structure is similar to that used in I Like to Put Food in My Welly and it’s equally, hilariously silly.

Zoo is the first word and everything starts sensibly with ‘Lots of wild animals live in the zoo. / Before a long trip you should sit on the loo. / My feet are so long, they poke out of my shoe.’ for which Max Low offers three cartoony illustrations – one per sentence.
Turn the page and the daftness takes over and we have, ‘ Lots of wild animals live in the loo. / Before a long trip you should sit on my shoe. / My feet are so long, they poke out of the zoo.’ Opposite this is an equally zany three line rhyme with more of Max Low’s illustrations, which are becoming increasingly surreal.

The other animals featured on the verso pages are in turn, Tiger, Giraffe, Penguins, Sea Lion, Lemur, 

Leopard and Elephant, each of which has a double spread of playful permutations of the original sensible (ish) three rhyming lines.

A splendidly funny read aloud that will quickly have young children in fits of laughter at the assemblage of wordplay and likely wanting to try and invent some of their own; there are plenty more zoo animals to play the language game with.

Early Years Picture Book Shelf

How About a Night Out?
Sam Williams and Matt Hunt
Boxer Books

We join a kitty cat embarking on a nocturnal excursion through the city where  adventures aplenty await. There are friends to meet for a ‘catercall’ upon the wall,

a roundabout to ride upon, birds to scare and much more. A ‘night to sing about’ claims our adventurer but all too soon the sun comes up and it’s time to head for home and some city kitty slumbers.

Delivered in jaunty rhyming couplets and Matt Hunt’s alluring art showing the cat’s journey against the inky dark sky, this will surely please early years listeners.

What Colour Is Night?
Grant Snider
Chronicle Books

If you’re thinking night is black, then have another think. You certainly will having read Grant Snider’s poetic nocturnal exploration. Herein he shows us the multitude of colours that a closer look will reveal. There’s blue for a start, ‘a big yellow moon beginning to rise’, the fireflies glowing gold in the park.

But that’s just the start: there are ‘Fat brown moths dancing in yellow streetlights’, a whole city lit with red neon signs, the green-eyed glow of prowling raccoons, silver stars spilling across the sky above the barely visible countryside.

The silent stillness of his scenes though, is not confined to the outdoors. Inside we see the grey face of a clock, the shapes afloat in the bowl holding a midnight snack are yellow blue and pink; while through the window we start to see the moon’s rings and outdoors once more are ‘all the night’s colours in one moonbow’.

I’m pretty sure that young readers and listeners will envy the sleeping child picked up and taken on a dream flight through pink and purple clouds over the city aglow with colours. Snider offers an ideal excuse for little ones to request a delay to their own slumbers in order to view those ‘colours unseen’.

What Can You See?
Jason Korsner and Hannah Rounding
I Like to Put Food in My Welly
Jason Korsner and Max Low
Graffeg

What Can You See? invites little ones to develop their observation skills as they focus on in turn a table laid for tea, a lounge, the garden, the sky, the jungle, a flower and a host of other focal points to locate the objects named in the relevant verse in Hannah Rounding’s delectable illustrations.
In I Like to Put Food in My Welly, playful topsy-turvies result from putting butter on the bread, pulling a rabbit from a hat, climbing an apple tree and other starting points, each scenario being presented in Max Low’s zany sequences (Did I see two of Max’s popular characters making a guest appearance?)

Engaging rhymes and art: just right for putting across the ‘language is fun’ message to pre-schoolers.