Dinosaur detective's Search-and-find rescue mission

Sophie Guerrive

Book - 2017

With his red airplane, the Dinosaur Detective travels the world in search of lost animals. A rich and whimsical "hide and seek" picture book, which takes the reader on a puzzle-packed tour of a dozen different destinations, including the jungle, the stormy sea and outerspace. Detailed drawings of drama-filled scenes will challenge children of all ages to test their spotting skills. -- amazon.com

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jE/Guerrive
1 / 2 copies available
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Children's Room jE/Guerrive Due May 6, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
London : Wide Eyed Editions 2017.
Language
English
Main Author
Sophie Guerrive (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 31 cm
ISBN
9781786030719
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Seek-and-find books don't get much more delightful than this English-language debut from French illustrator Gerrive, in which a blue sauropod locates missing people and animals in 11 scenes. "Dinosaur Detective! One of my students is hiding because he hasn't done his homework. Can you find him?" asks an irate teacher in a mountain scene featuring dozens of tiny skiers, sheep, shepherds-and giant monsters gnawing on snow-capped peaks. Gerrive channels Martin Handford in dense illustrations packed with surreal details (a planet made up of eyes, a museum crowded with humans, animals, ghosts, and aliens), and finding the missing creatures and objects is satisfyingly challenging. Ages 3-6. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Jaded Where's Waldo seachers will have to up their games considerably to match this sharp-eyed new dino-detective.In a stubby red airplane Dinosaur Detective sets out to spot five figures or items hidden in each of 11 localesfrom a closely packed medieval European village to an equally labyrinthine museum, from a spaghettilike tangle of caves to a ridiculously overcrowded neighborhood in outer space. With malice aforethought Guerrive fills each aerial (or underground) view with arrays of similar rooflines and other natural or artificial features to interfere with systematic visual inspection. She crowds into them dozens of precisely drawn but very small people, ETs, artifacts, and general bric-a-brac. There's so much to see that the search for an umbrella-bearing robot, a rabbit gymnast, or whatever else Dinosaur Detective is looking for can easily take a back seat to savoring the surreal side business. Monsters chow down on mountain peaks; a roller-coaster rider at the fair loses her lunch; fur-clad boaters paddle their way across a starry sky past a moon with a spaceship in its eye; a seascape teems with mythological references. The human cast is pleasantly diverse of skin color and even includes some mixed-race families. Invitations to turn back ("Did I see a giraffe in space?") and a visual key that may require a magnifying glass to use follow a final cutaway view of Dinosaur Dectective's 12-level home. Major challenges indeed for fans of nose-to-page viewing. (Picture book. 6-10) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.