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Don’t trust fish

by Neil Sharpson and Dan Santat
2025 / 40 pages

Can you look at this title and not open the cover? And it only gets better the further on and further in you go. I’ve shared this with everyone in my family, though they are all long past the picture book stage. I gave a dramatic reading to my wife, because I just had to. This is the kind of book that can make a dad into a performer – your kids will be asking for encores. You may well get a standing ovation! (I’m quite sure I just missed out on one.)

I don’t want to spoil the story so I’ll only share the inside book flap.

Fish.

They’re in our homes.
They’re in our water.
But what do we really know about them?

Don’t.
Trust.
FISH.

That, there is a really good inside flap, and too good to really let it go to waste so let me lay this tip on you dads – don’t start this read-aloud on page 1, start on the inside flap!

So run – but don’t swim – to your nearest bookstore and get this one today!

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Book Reviews, Children’s picture books

Who's on First?

by Bud Abbott and Lou Costello illustrated by John Martz 40 pages / 2013 If you've ever seen the ol' Abbott and Costello "Who's on First" routine, then to "sell" this book to you all I need to share is that this is a faithful rendition. The comedians have taken the role of a bear and a rabbit, the colors are all bright and bold and the script is straight from the 60+ year old original. If you've never heard the "Who's on First" routine, then a word of explanation might be due. In this comedic bit Costello asks Abbott about his baseball team. But poor Costello gets a mite confused because the baseball team has some unusual names. The first baseman, for example, has the name "Who." So when Costello wants to know "Who's on first?" the unsatisfactory answer he gets from Abbott is "Exactly." The gives you a taste of what this is all about. (I did my own homage to this routine when I had to create an illustration for an article about how only boys - not girls - have the Y chromosome). I read this to my five year old and she got parts of it, but I would say this is probably best suited for the 7+ crowd. I was trying to think of any cautions I could add and the only think I could come up with is that there is a bit of yelling in the book so this might not be one to read to a rambunctious lad. It is a great fun book that is sure to get some giggles out of your little ones. I'd recommend this as a great one to get from the library rather than own, since it is based on a joke, and jokes don't stand up to repeated reads quite like good stories do. But it is a very good joke and wonderfully executed. ...