Pulitzer Prize-winner Toni Morrison returns with her son Slade for a second kids' book, this one a catalog of the "mean people" in a young rabbit's life. The results, happily, make for much more fun than the Morrison duo's weirdly subtle The Big Box.
"This is a book about mean people," begins our tiny hero, and almost immediately we realize that illustrator Pascal Lemaître is going to give cartoonist Matt Groening a run for his money when it comes to goofily rendered rabbits. Each "mean" person gets playful, exaggerated, kid-perspective treatment from Lemaître, whether we're seeing a towering dad who barely fits onto two pages ("Some mean people are big") or a mother who's using her nearly telescopic arm to force veggies down our hero's throat ("There are people who smile when they are being mean"). The rabbit's "Mean People" book gets assembled page by page, and no one is spared--not grandparents, brothers, teachers, not even a babysitter with an alarm clock five times the size of her head.
The Morrisons maintain some of their Big Box subtlety by begging the question--of both kids and grownups--of why and whether and which of these people are really "mean" at all. (Even young kids will see the difference between making somebody get out of bed in the morning and tearing the wings off a butterfly.) Whatever the lesson, The Book of Mean People ends inevitably, triumphantly--"I will smile anyway!"--with a joyous, naked plunge into a flowery forest. ("How about that!") (Ages 4 to 8) --Paul Hughes
"This is a book about mean people," begins our tiny hero, and almost immediately we realize that illustrator Pascal Lemaître is going to give cartoonist Matt Groening a run for his money when it comes to goofily rendered rabbits. Each "mean" person gets playful, exaggerated, kid-perspective treatment from Lemaître, whether we're seeing a towering dad who barely fits onto two pages ("Some mean people are big") or a mother who's using her nearly telescopic arm to force veggies down our hero's throat ("There are people who smile when they are being mean"). The rabbit's "Mean People" book gets assembled page by page, and no one is spared--not grandparents, brothers, teachers, not even a babysitter with an alarm clock five times the size of her head.
The Morrisons maintain some of their Big Box subtlety by begging the question--of both kids and grownups--of why and whether and which of these people are really "mean" at all. (Even young kids will see the difference between making somebody get out of bed in the morning and tearing the wings off a butterfly.) Whatever the lesson, The Book of Mean People ends inevitably, triumphantly--"I will smile anyway!"--with a joyous, naked plunge into a flowery forest. ("How about that!") (Ages 4 to 8) --Paul Hughes
Used availability for Slade Morrison's The Book of Mean People
See all available used copies of this book at: Abebooks UK or Abebooks US
Hardback Editions
September 2002 : Hardback
| Title: Book of Mean People, The Author(s): Toni Morrison ISBN: 0-7868-0540-4 / 978-0-7868-0540-2 (USA edition) Publisher: Hyperion Availability: Amazon Amazon UK Amazon CA WorldCat More details... |
September 2002 : Hardback
| Title: Book Of Mean People Author(s): Toni Morrison, Slade Morrison ISBN: 0-7868-2471-9 / 978-0-7868-2471-7 (USA edition) Publisher: Hyperion Availability: Amazon Amazon UK Amazon CA WorldCat More details... |
Other Editions
September 2002 : Spiral-bound
| Title: My Book Of Mean People Journal Author(s): Toni Morrison, Morrison Slade ISBN: 0-7868-0895-0 / 978-0-7868-0895-3 (USA edition) Publisher: Hyperion Availability: Amazon Amazon UK Amazon CA More details... |
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