The butter battle book

Seuss

Book - 1984

Engaged in a long-running battle, the Yooks and the Zooks develop more and more sophisticated weaponry as they attempt to outdo each other.

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jE/Seuss
0 / 2 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jE/Seuss Due Dec 23, 2024
Children's Room jE/Seuss Due Dec 22, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
New York : Random House c1984.
Language
English
Main Author
Seuss (-)
Physical Description
unpaged : ill
ISBN
9780394865805
9780394965802
9780881034219
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Gr. 1-3. The question of which side of the bread to butter eventually escalates into an arms race between the Yooks and the Zooks in an open-ended allegorical fantasy filled with Seuss' sprawling illustrations.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A parable of armaments escalation--from the Snick-Berry Switch to the Big-Boy Boomeroo--whose high-level meaning no child can miss. This anti-nuke message in Seussian terms has one point of difference with such earlier anti-war picturebooks as William Wondriska's The Tomato Patch: it doesn't end in amity, but with the enemy Yooks and Zooks both poised to drop their bombs--and the grandson of the bomb-wielding Yook looking aghast. But, like previous embodiments of the theme, this one reduces the rivalry to a petty, nonsensical difference--the titular Butter Battle. Yooks, that is, spread their bread with the butter side up; Zooks, with the butter side down. (A perverse notion, the pictures demonstrate.) The actual weapons escalation involves some wild Seussian creations and some characteristic manic glee. Says Zook-rep VanItch (note the name): ""My wonderful weapon, the Jigger-Rock Snatchem, will fling 'em right back as quick as we catch 'em./We'll have no more nonsense./We'll take no more gupp/from you Yooks who eat bread with the butter side up!"" But in the aftermath of wide exposure to The Day After and other 1980s arousals, all this seems, however well-intended, a little simplistic, a little out-of-date, even a little out-of-keeping. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.