Review by Booklist Review
Doug-Dennis, a sheep, and Ben-Bobby, an elephant, are bored. So they head off to the movies, where the first order of business is to buy a bucket of popcorn. Then a bad thing happens. Doug-Dennis, riding on the elephant's back, eats all the popcorn. And lies about it. Lies have a tendency to morph and grow. Pretty soon, the lies have lifted Doug-Dennis into the air, where he meets other liars attached to their tiny, whiney, sometimes slimy fibs. There's only one way down, of course, and here that's to tell the truth by yelling, It was me! Back on terra firma, D-D makes his confession to B-B, who is nonchalant about l'affaire de popcorn, adding, That's OK. While you were gone, I ate your candy bar. First-time picture-book author Farrell creates amusing artwork with pen and ink, Photoshop, and Illustrator and adds graphic-novel elements (panels and lots of speech balloons). There's plenty of Mo Willems-type fun here, and this just might lead to a discussion of lies as well.--Cooper, Ilene Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Sharp-edged irony and wacky cartoon visuals provide newcomer Farrell's moral tale with some serious wattage. Doug-Dennis, a rather vacant-looking sheep with stick legs and red basketball sneakers, can't bring himself to confess that he's eaten his friend Ben-Bobby's popcorn. After he tells a fib ("Hmm, maybe it was monsters. Yeah, that's it, monsters!!"), he quickly gets "carried away"-quite literally-by the very speech balloons that contain his fibs. To the amazement of onlookers below, he floats across the continents on his own hot air before arriving in a sort of fibbers' purgatory in outer space. Surrounded by hardcore fibbers ("This limited time offer is the deal of the century!!!" announces a man with five o'clock shadow and a briefcase), Doug-Dennis is so lonely and unsettled that he finds it in himself to confess, which allows him to descend to earth and make up with Ben-Bobby. Despite the antifib message, the fibs are where all the entertainment is ("I invented the inter-web," declares a spider), and the ethically unsteady Doug-Dennis has plenty of Homer Simpson-like appeal. Ages 5-8. (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review
PreS-Gr 1-Doug-Dennis, a sneaker and cap-wearing sheep, goes to the circus with Ben-Bobby, an elephant with jet-black hair. In the midst of the action, Dougy commits the cardinal friend-offense; he eats Ben-Bobby's popcorn and then lies about it. After telling his fib, he is immediately launched into space where he is surrounded by all sorts of other liars (everyone from kids with imaginary friends to used-car salesmen) and eventually figures out that the only way to escape is to tell the truth. Farrell's offhanded humor and the absolute absurdity of the situation and characters make this a fun lesson in truth-telling. The pen and ink and digitally created cartoon illustrations feel almost childlike in their imagination (the animals inexplicably have pink eye patches over one eye) and contain hidden gems of humor, much like the text. Each page contains dialogue and characters that offer funny asides and quips beyond the main story. Much like the work of funnymen Jon Scieszka, Lane Smith, and Mo Willems, some of the humor is intended for adults, but the absolute silliness of the story will have young readers giggling as well. Farrell takes the typically dull subject of lying and offers a wacky sheep and elephant friendship as a way of opening up family conversations about telling the truth.-Sarah Townsend, Norfolk Public Library, VA (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review
At the circus, sheep Doug-Dennis lies about eating his friend's popcorn and soon finds himself whisked away high in the sky where he meets other fibbers with "their still-growing fibs": "That grape juice spilled itself"; "Seriously, the dog ate my homework." Squeezing in a multitude of visual and textual gags makes for some busy layouts, but the book's witty silliness never grows tiresome. (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Sheep Doug-Dennis and elephant Ben-Bobby are great friends, the type of buddies who go to the circus when bored. But when Doug-Dennis eats all of Ben-Bobby's popcorn before the circus even starts, he decides to lie about it. The fib carries Doug-Dennis far away, into the heavens, as far as the truth will stretch. The story is told mostly through speech bubbles with amusing pen-and-ink cartoon drawings that move the familiar theme to a story of hilarious and exaggerated lengths. The image of the putty-limbed Doug-Dennis floating in outer space, attached only to his growing, speech-bubbled lie, among other lies and liars ("Who went pee? Where?" exclaims one innocent-looking little pup), will resonate with both young readers and the adults who read to them. This is no simple didactic treatise on the evils of lying; newcomer Farrell gives sound advice about getting out of a fib. Young readers and listeners will laugh with recognition at Doug-Dennis's familiar plight and, after a few readings, will be reading it themselves. A promising first book; here's hoping his second is just as funny. (Picture book. 4-8) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.