Stop that yawn!

Caron Levis

Book - 2018

Gabby convinces Granny to leave Sleepytown and stay up all night in a new place, but before long, a contagious yawn takes control.

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Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jE/Levis Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
New York : Atheneum [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Caron Levis (author)
Other Authors
LeUyen Pham (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 31 cm
ISBN
9781481441797
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Gabby Wild is in a tooth-gnashing frenzy. She's got to prevent the people in Sleepytown from going to bed, because snuggling and snoring is such a bore. With Granny in tow, she jets off to keep downtown from settling down and uptown up. Despite her determined plans, Granny opens wide and her yawn is on the loose! Gabby enlists the animals' Midnight Marching Band to toot and blare; she sings, shouts, stomps, and fusses, but still the city gets cozy and quiet and peaceful. In a hilarious close-up, she looks directly at the reader, saying: YOU are NOT sleepy, right? Grit your teeth, seal your lips! Whatever you do, don't you dare YAWN! At book's end, while Granny snuggles her cozily, Gabby parties all night in the land of her wildest dreams. The busy digitally colored panels rendered in coquille and india ink show imagined frenetic activities. Appealing, dark-skinned Gabby is well dressed in the red dress, headband and riotous mop of hair that fits her energetic personality.--Lolly Gepson Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Gabby Wild has a missing tooth, brown skin, and beaded "click-clacky hair," and she has had it with sleep. She convinces her grandmother to take her to Never Sleeping City, where neon lights blink, the streets hop with revelers, and everyone stays up all night long. But somehow, on the Ferris wheel, Granny yawns-and yawns, of course, are contagious. "Grit your teeth, seal your lips!" Gabby cries, as the misty blue yawn flies into the night and people start dropping off in its wake. Dashing through the town after it, Gabby makes a ruckus, hijacks an opera performance, and collars the mayor, but it's no use. Before long, the unthinkable has happened, and Gabby is exhaling zzz's. Text by Levis (Ida, Always) crackles, and show-stopping artwork by Pham (Grace for President) is great fun. In affectionate homage to In the Night Kitchen (and maybe to Little Nemo before it), Gabby pilots her own plane into panels of dreamlike urban landscapes filled with carnival characters and vaudevillian antics; other picture book Easter eggs await. Ages 4-8. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

PreS-Gr 2-Gabby Wild is sick of Sleepytown. So, when it's time for bed, she begs her granny to take her some place awake! Instead of settling down, the two jet out to Never Sleeping City, a bustling metropolis with a band, an opera, and even a carnival. Gabby and Granny have a blast exploring the sights-until Granny lets loose a yawn that travels through the town. Gabby chases after it, trying to stop the yawn before it puts everyone in Never Sleeping City out of commission. But each time the yawn sweeps through a part of the town, its residents are left snoring. Levis has created a thoroughly engaging bedtime read that will have little ones fighting back yawns of their own, and Pham's illustrations are an excellent accompaniment. Gabby leaps off the page in pursuit of the soothing blue yawn that turns the bustling and busy streets of Never Sleeping City cozy and calm. With a combination of eye-catching illustrations and entertaining text, this engaging picture book is a fantastic read-aloud that encourages plenty of participation. VERDICT Snap it up for pajama storytime or for bedtime reads displays or shelves.-Mimi Powell, Library Systems and Services, Kissimmee, FL © Copyright 2018. 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

Everyone knows that yawning is contagiousfine at bedtime, but not in the fantastical world of Never Sleeping City, the nighttime destination of energetic young Gabby Wild and her good-natured grandmother. Tonight we are going to party ALLLL night! says Gabby, and for a while Granny is game. But once Granny accidentally lets slip a yawn, its up to Gabby to try to rouse all the suddenly-sleepy revelers around them (her refrain: Grit your teeth, seal your lips, we have to stop thatYAWN). So far it doesnt sound like a Sendak homagebut open the book and its many visual references to In the Night Kitchen (rev. 2/71) are clear, from Gabby and Grannys flying-bed transport; to the lookalike font, midnight-blue hues, and page design (alternating full-page art with spreads, spots, and long vertical panels); to the bustlingly busy illustrations. Levis and Pham provide a neat update, with a high-energy, adventure-minded, brown-skinned, female protagonist embarking on her surreal nighttime adventure. (Would Sendak have approved of the grandparental supervision? Probably not; but Leviss story line is her own, and Granny is key.) The tale takes a meta turn when Gabby directly addresses readers: YOU are NOT sleepy, right? This is NOT a bedtime story! But yawns are hard to contain, even for night owls like Gabbywhose exploits are sure to be continuing in the rumpus, er, party happening in the land of her wildest dreams. elissa Gershowitz (c) Copyright 2018. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Like many children, Gabby Wild has absolutely had enough of the tedious rituals of bedtime. Gabby asks her grandmother to take her to Never Sleeping City, and without a word of protest, inquiry, or declaration, Granny agrees. In this imagined place, there are no lullabies, no sheep to count, and the No Sleeping Inn, where "our lights are always on." Granny and Gabby head to the carnival, and as they ride on a coffee-mug Ferris wheel, it begins to happenGranny starts to yawn. Gabby soon learns that once a yawn starts, there's little to prevent it, and before they know it, Granny's yawn is swirling all over the city, affecting all who come in its path. To her horror, the brown-skinned protagonist with thick free-form locs has only one place left to turn: "YOU." In an interactive twist, Gabby asks readers not to fall asleepafter all, "This is NOT a bedtime story!" But it's far too late; the yawn has proven itself effective not only on readers, but on the protagonist as well. Though the story is set at night, the Sendak-ian artwork remains bright with pops of color that give a buoyancy to the city and its memorable inhabitants, who are both human and animal. In one scene a gorilla and a black man walk side by side holding ice cream cones, an image that may lift some eyebrows.The lively portrayal more than makes up for the most extended yawn depicted in a picture book. (Picture book. 5-8) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.