Tallulah the Tooth Fairy CEO

Tamara Pizzoli

Book - 2019

Tallulah the Tooth Fairy, a black businesswoman who runs one of the most successful tooth collecting organizations in the world, finds herself unexpectedly stumped when six-year-old Ballard Burchell leaves a note instead of his tooth under his pillow.

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Subjects
Genres
Children's stories Pictorial works
Picture books
Published
New York : Farrar Straus Giroux 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Tamara Pizzoli (author)
Other Authors
Federico Fabiani (illustrator)
Edition
First Farrar Straus Giroux edition
Item Description
Originally published in Texas by The English Schoolhouse in 2016.
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 29 cm
ISBN
9780374309190
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Tallulah (Tooth Fairy, CEO) is Fashion-Week chic. Dressed from head to toe in stylish clothes often with a subtle tooth pattern or accessory this high-fashion, thoroughly modern Black woman will win the admiration of all young readers. When Tallulah is not meeting with her therapist or doing her self-care routine of yoga, Pilates, reading, and visiting art galleries, she is busy with her tooth fairy enterprise. She runs a full operation with employees to supervise yes, there is more than one tooth fairy! Tallulah resembles a fabulous friend or aunt who blends into everyday life no wings, she just dons a pair of night-vision goggles for her nightly tooth-collecting missions. The author does a fantastic job of crafting an engaging and believable story for children who want to know about the tooth fairy. The illustrations cleverly inject pop-art references and switch between vibrant, saturated colors for Tallulah's daytime activities and a plum-colored palette for her secret nighttime missions. When she encounters a snag in her usual tooth-retrieval routine, her thoughtful solution will only make readers love her more. This is a must-have for all collections. Children and adults alike will fall in love with this hilarious picture book.--Tiffany Flowers Copyright 2010 Booklist

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

Giving the tooth fairy tongue-in-cheek professional legitimacy, Pizzoli (who has published numerous African folktales with her boutique company, The English Schoolhouse) offers a modish tale about Tallulah, founder and CEO of Teeth Titans Inc., for whom "looking after children's pearly whites" is more than just a job-"it is her career." Sporting a purple-hued Afro and jewelry fashioned from teeth, the posh business mogul wisely balances her time: various mornings are spent chatting with her therapist, visiting teeth-centric museum exhibits, and practicing yoga, while afternoons are reserved for recruiting and training tooth-fairy employees. These sophisticated pastimes are less kid than adult targeted, until Tallulah, wearing night-vision glasses, begins her tooth-collecting rounds. What does the entrepreneur do when she hits an unprecedented snag in the form of a boy who has lost his lost tooth? She calls an emergency meeting with her tooth fairy board of directors, of course. Building on the narrative's playful satire, Fabiani's stylized matte cartoons incorporate some quirky flourishes: Tallulah entertains a tooth fairy-in-training at a North Pole lounge, where an elf tends bar. A fun flight of fancy featuring an engagingly eccentric heroine. Ages 4-8. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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

K-Gr 2--Tallulah isn't your normal tooth fairy; she's the CEO of all the tooth fairies! With her cool hand at the helm of her organization, everything runs smoothly until a child loses a tooth meant for retrieval, and Tallulah must find a solution. The first half focuses on her jet-setting persona and her weekly routine, which includes going to art museums and getting drinks with Mrs. Claus, while the second half reads more like a traditional picture book. While it's refreshing to see a woman of color not only represented as a classic fantasy figure, as they are often depicted exclusively as white, but also as a successful businesswoman and entrepreneur, arguably the text could have focused more on the plot and less on establishing the character. Still, parents will smirk at the gentle jabs to corporate culture that the book references. Illustrations are smooth and give a sleek modern feel to the piece, with images of teeth hidden throughout. VERDICT A fun, solid addition to contemporary fairy tale collections.--Peter Blenski, Hartland Public Library, WI

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

A tooth-fairy mogul wrote the manual, but even the expert can be caught off guard.Tallulah, CEO of Teeth Titans Inc., gives readers a sneak peek into her glamorous life. The wry narrative mimics the tone of many an inspirational biography, informing readers that Tallulah works hard to strike "a healthy balance between the three Ps: passion, purpose, and what pays." From yoga to museum visits, Tallulah seems to have a full schedule, but she still makes time to hire and train tooth fairies for the entire world. Expert Tallulah has all the answersor so she thinks until the night she gets a surprise from a little boy. Ballard has lost his toothliterallyand leaves an explanatory note under his pillow in place of the missing item. This triggers an emergency board meeting that features remarkably realistic dialogue. Tom, a white man and the only board member who is not a woman of color, wears an #AllFairiesMatter T-shirt; his off-topic complaint about the lack of diversity makes an opening for important conversations with young readers. Tallulah is black and sports a voluminous purple Afro; Tom is the sole white character. Details in both Pizzoli's text (Tallulah's also the founder of the National Association for the Appreciation and Care of Primary Teeth, or NAACP-T) and Fabiani's matte illustrations (a series of enormous, Warhol-like prints of Tallulah adorns her walls) will set adult readers chuckling.Funny and provocative. (Picture book. 6-10) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.