Monday, June 9, 2025

Review: So Much! by Trish Cooke How to Show Love without Cliche'

So Much! by Trish Cooke So Much! by Trish Cooke by Trish Cooke
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

There is soooo much to say about this book!

So Much! 

By Trish Cooke

1994

Candlewick Press

Ages 3 and up



Everybody want to squeeze the baby. Everybody wants to kiss the baby! Everybody loves the baby….SO MUCH!




    


“Masterfully captures the closeness of the family and the wonder of the baby…A celebration of warm and loving African-American family.”  Kirkus Reviews.


Critically Acclaimed Winner of:

Smarties Book Prize

The Kurt Maschler Award

The WHS Smith and She Magazine Awards.


100 Best Children’s Book of 2016 by Time Out.


    Trish Cooke is a British playwright, actress, television presenter, scriptwriter and children's author who might be best known for being a presenter on the children's series Playdays. She also wrote under the pseudonym Roselia John Baptiste



        Review


What I loved: 

    I'm going to say the quiet part outloud on this one.  I love the choice to wrap this story around a Black family, specifically a  little Black baby boy.  


    Black boys get it so rough in this world.   Black men feel that the only way they can receive  love is to be "respected", and many black men have grown up learning that the only way they can gain respect is to be the hardest, roughest, meanest, toughest richest man in the room.  I love that this story paints a different picture.

           Everyone loves this little black baby boy.  He is shown just as much affection by his uncles and male cousins, as by his mother, grandmothers, and aunt.  He is kissed, snuggled, read to, played with, danced around and generally enjoyed by the entire family.  There is no doubt that everyone loves this baby.

   

     The twist at the end was the perfect cherry on the top of this cake of family affection.  The entire family has gathered to show, not just love for the cute child, but also adoration for his  father, a grown black man who has clearly been at work all day, because it's his birthday.  They are celebrating his birth, his life, and his presence while he is still alive to enjoy it.

      His wife has made him a meal.  You can't tell if the uncle and aunt are the father's brother and sister or his in-laws.  You can't tell which of the older women is the father's mother, because they all love him so much!  The family wraps around the father and shows him just as much love as they've shown his son.

      We all know that families are not simple.  There are complications and complexities that can make or break a family dynamic.  But in just this two short panels we see a family coming together to celebrate a man just for being present.  How this story changes the narrative of black boys, unconditional love, and masculine energy being able to receive affection will effect his son's future, or, more profoundly, it will change the perspective of everyone reading this story.  Black kids, kids, all kids, male and female, everyone needs love. 


    What I liked:

         This story met all the picture book story beats in a clever and creative way.  The repetitive sentences make listening to  the book fun for young readers, but also allows for the adult reader to have fun telling it.  

    Each character has a unique way of expressing love and happiness at seeing the baby.  This allows adult readers to find different ways to voice the characters thus making the book a bit of a performance.  



    What I'd change:

    The language of the book was very familiar to me.   I enjoyed reading the story aloud.  However my husband, who is white, felt uncomfortable attempting the cultural twang.  He felt as though he were being culturally insensitive just reading the words of the book and felt like it wasn't something he or other white parents would/should attempt to read the story in that way.  Or else they risk appearing like they are parodying black people or making fun of black families to entertain their children.  I want families of all ethnic and racial backgrounds to bond over this story - and perhaps develop feelings of empathy for people they have learned to feel hard towards, perhaps unintentionally in some cases.  But I see my husband's point, so I mention it here.  


    Also, in other reviews of this book, the grandmother's threatening to "eat the baby" were taking in the wrong way.  I've had adults threaten to "eat me up because she's so cute". So this didn't bother me.  But even my mother wished they'd chosen different language, because times have changed and my daughter didn't understand.  


    Conclusion:

    This book is an excellent book for showing the pure love a family.  It has excellent illustrations that show black boys and black men need and deserve to be loved.  The language is very black, which may limit it's audience.  But it's a beautiful story with a beautiful message that everyone could learn from.   




        If you like this book please show Trishe Cook  and illustrator Helen Oxenbury some love by checking So Much! out from your local library or purchase it your favorite bookstore.

     Amazon.  


If you enjoyed this review please subscribe to leave a comment here, or leave a comment on BlueSky!  I'm @PB&JellyPhish and I'd love to hear from you.  

    I'm Porsche B. Yeary and 



I'll see you on the next page!



Recommendations!

If you liked this story you might also enjoy


Full, Full, Full of Love by Trish Cooke


The Grandpa Tree by Trish Cooke and Sharon Wilson



The Three Little Wolves and Big Bad Pig by Eugene Trivizas and Helen Oxenbury  


Monkey and Me by Emily Gravett

A Visitor for Bear by Bonny Becker

Savvy by Ingrid Law

The Willoughbys by Lois Lowry


        




View all my reviews

Monday, May 12, 2025

Using Dialogue to Build Character the The Lion's Share by Matthew McElligott

The Lion's Share The Lion's Share by Matthew McElligott
My rating: 5 of 5 stars




The Lion’s Share: A Tale of Halving Cake and Eating it, too

By Mathew McElligott

Walker& Company

2009

1st - 3rd Grades


When a very small ant is invited to the lion’s dinner party, she knows to be on her best behavior.  It is truly an honor to dine with the king of the jungle!

But the other partygoers don’t share her good manners.  The greedy guests gobble up dessert, leaving nothing but a crumb for the ant to share with her king.  Baking another cake seems like the perfect way to make it up to him…until the other boastful guests turn her kind gesture into a contest.  

Exactly how many cakes are fit for a king?  


YouTube Vid of Book





The Illustrations

    The illustrations work seamlessly with the story.  They clearly capture the character of each individual animal, and help parents craft funny voices to go along with the dialogue.   They are also an excellent visual aid for the mathematical concepts presented.


The Story

       Comes off like an African folktale that I've heard before, where the lion has his annual party.  Usually, the king of beasts issues punishments to rude guests in a story like this.  But this time, the lion set back and let's the guests punish themselves.  
   

 Likes!  
  I like any story that can introduce complicated mathematic concepts to youngsters without them noticing.  In this story your child will be introduced to fractions, and multiplication, all while listening to an entertaining story of characters trying to out do each other. 


 What I Loved

This story is actually fun to read out loud.  It's easy to get into character and give each of the animals different voices.  It's easy to explain that the animals are over doing themselves trying to one up the ant.  And it's lovely seeing the polite ant get ahead by logical and low drama.



Disliked

My only critique of this story is that the king lion has very little personality. He barely reacts to the rudeness of his guests - only a frown in the illustrations show's he's bothered. 

Nor is there any explanation as to why the animals felt it was ok to be so rude at the King's table.  

This story puts me in mind of African folktales I've heard before.  In those stories there are consequences for animals being rude to the king.  Here the lion says nothing, and does nothing while his guests disrespect his table. 


 I understand that table manners isn't the point of the story.  But I think having the lion express irritation in some way would help lend to the ant's hurried apology, and the other animals rush to overreact. As it stands, why are they even trying to impress the king?  He doesn't really seem bothered by anything.    


Bedtime Breakdown

    This is an excellent story for little listeners of all ages!  It's a good introduction to fractions, and an entertaining support story for multiplication.  It's fun to read out loud, and can easily be told as a free style performance when you don't have the book handy.  I wish the lion of the story had more personality, but there is plenty of characterization in the other animals to make up for it.



This book is excellent for anyone who knows, or is expected to some day learn, fractions, fairness, and multiplication.  



In conclusion.


        If you like this book please show Matt McElligott some love by checking this book out from your local library or purchase it your favorite bookstore.

   Purchase through my  Amazon link to help the blog grow.  


If you enjoyed this review please subscribe to leave a comment here, or leave a comment on BlueSky!  I'm @PB&JellyPhish and I'd love to hear from you.  

    I'm Porsche B. Yeary and 



I'll see you on the next page!




Recommendations


    
Even Aliens Need Snacks  by Mathew McElligott


    Bean Thirteen by Mathew McElligott












            

        View all my reviews





View all my reviews

Saturday, April 19, 2025

Cobb/Paulding April 2025 Newsletter.