Rabbit's bad habits

Julian Gough, 1966-

Book - 2019

From novelist and playwright Julian Gough, and the winner of the Roald Dahl Funny Prize, Jim Field, comes a brilliantly funny story of a rabbit and bear who discover that things are always better when they're shared with a friend ... Bear wakes up early from hibernation. If she can't sleep, then at least she can make a snowman. Rabbit has never made a snowman, but he definitely wants to make one that's better than Bear's. But with an avalanche and a hungry wolf heading his way, Rabbit soon realises that it might be nice to have a friend on your side. A tale of friendship, gravity, and just a little bit of poo.

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Subjects
Genres
Humorous fiction
Published
San Diego, CA : Silver Dophin Books, an imprint of Printers Row Publishing Group [2019].
Language
English
Main Author
Julian Gough, 1966- (author)
Other Authors
Jim Field, 1980- (illustrator)
Item Description
First published in Great Britain in 2016 by Hodder Children's Books.
Physical Description
92 pages : illustrations ; 19 cm
ISBN
9781684125883
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Gough's children's debut, a series starter that was first published in the U.K. in 2016, chronicles a rocky friendship between clever, grouchy Rabbit and slowmoving, gentle Bear, with some eyeopening biology thrown in for free. After discovering that her hibernation food stash has been stolen, Bear encounters grumpy Rabbit, whose response to her friendly overtures isn't promising ("Go away... and take your avalanche with you"). Back in his hole, Rabbit is revealed as the food thief. He tucks into Bear's delicious grub, and then-"he did a little poo and ate it." Witnessing this personal moment, Bear inquires after it politely. In a hilarious and enlightening sequence, Rabbit explains why rabbits need the extra digestive goround ("It's really, really difficult to make a rabbit out of plants"). Bear starts to understand Rabbit's physiology (and grouchiness) better, and Rabbit comes to value Bear's playful nature-a virtue that proves lifesaving when a hungry wolf appears. Illustrations by Field (The Koala Who Could) appear on every page, featuring elastic facial expressions and frenetic action that keeps the energy crackling. Gough aces the characters' bumpy encounters, and the intimate details of Rabbit's life are guaranteed to make even the squeamish laugh-and learn. Ages 8-12. (Jan.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Kirkus Book Review

A bear's kindness and generosity sweeten a grumpy rabbit's sour outlook in this wintry woodland encounter.Gough aims both high and low. On the one hand, he shows how the peaceable responses of Bear, equanimity unshaken despite discovering that her food stores have disappeared, to Rabbit's rude comments and behavior gradually work a profound change in his characterand on the other, in the course of their exchanges, he has the long-eared lagomorph deliver a clinically explicit, hilariously extended disquisition on why his kind eats its own poo. Bear goes even further, saving Rabbit from an attacking wolf and then, when he shamefacedly produces the food that he had (yes) stolen earlier, inviting him to join her for a moonlit picnic and a snuggle in her cozy den. The narrative, laid out in short, well-leaded lines, likewise snuggles on every page with Field's duotone cartoon scenes of the two furry figures meeting, parting, starting separate snowmen but ultimately coming together to finish one, and finally sharing a honeycomb and other goodies before bedding down in the warm den. When, showing a newly awakened sense of compassion, Rabbit wonders if the snowman is lonely, Bear has the perfect solution: "In the morning," she murmurs drowsily, "we can make him a friend."Young readers will come away with fresh insights into both poo and peacemaking. (Animal fantasy. 6-8) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.