Never trumpet with a crumpet

Amy Gibson

Book - 2019

In this hilarious, tongue-in-cheek picture book about manners, zoo animals attempt to follow proper etiquette when they are accidentally invited to tea with the queen. Sit up straight. Don't slump. Don't slouch. Lay your napkin on your pouch. Amy Gibson's playful, rhyming text offers etiquette advice to zoo animals who scrupulously try, then marvelously fail, to mind their manners at the queen's tea party (much to the queen's dismay and the young prince's delight). Meanwhile, Jenn Harney's illustrations contrast humorously with the rules spelled out in the narrative: the animals lick their paws, gobble their food, swing from the chandelier, and trumpet while nibbling on a crumpet, in scenes that grow incre...asingly chaotic as they build to an uproarious finale. This original, ingenious book is unique in its wild sense of wit and its sly, subtle lesson on proper behavior.

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Subjects
Genres
Stories in rhyme
Humorous stories
Picture books
Published
Honesdale, PA : Boyd Mills Press [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Amy Gibson (author)
Other Authors
Jennifer Harney (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781629793047
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A queen invites a host of animals to tea. Will they mind their manners?In lively rhyme, Gibson follows a smattering of guests to the royal palace. An elephant, a giraffe, a moose, and more tromp inside, ready for tea. But they aren't sure how to behave. Gibson cautions readers to not follow the animals' instincts. "Sip your tea. Don't lap it up. / No blowing bubbles in your cup. / Show courtesy. Don't take too much, / but always take the one you touch." The queen becomes increasingly appalled by the spills, sprays, and mayhem, but the young prince is delighted in watching others break the rules (ones that have surely been told to him many times). A few messages get muddled with the animal references: "Sit up straight. Don't slump. Don't slouch. / Lay your napkin on your pouch." (A small opossum does have a napkin across her lap in the illustration but is also hanging upside down above the table with her head turned a full and alarming 180 degrees; this may leave readers wondering more than just exactly where their pouches are). Harney dresses the queen in furs and frills, with a high, white bouffant wig and pointed features. Her son is more cherubic, with a twinkle in his eye to show his penchant for mischief. They (the only two humans in evidence) both present white.A raucous rumpus of royal persuasion. (Picture book. 3-7) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.