Hello, Jimmy!

Anna Walker

Book - 2021

"A funny, noisy parrot comes into Jack's world and brings him closer to his dad in an unexpected and moving way"--

Saved in:

Children's Room Show me where

jE/Walker
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jE/Walker Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
New York : Clarion Books [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Anna Walker (author)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 29 cm
Audience
Ages 4 to 7.
Grades K-1.
ISBN
9780358193586
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Lately, when Jack stays with his dad, Dad seems less engaged--he doesn't even tell jokes like he used to. Then Dad brings home a parrot he's found, Jimmy, who cheers him up. But Jack's not a fan of the bird; Dad has such high praise for Jimmy that Jack feels left out. Then, at bedtime one night, Jack's vision of his room filled with looming, staring parrots leads him to open the window, hoping they'll fly away. The next morning, Jack discovers Jimmy is gone, and he sets out alone to find him. Dad, meanwhile, is also searching, but for Jack, not Jimmy, and their reunion in the park is a sweet, poignant reminder of their special bond. Walker's succinct, eloquent prose is enhanced by her expressive gouache-and-pencil illustrations that extend the narrative with subtle visual details. Jimmy provides some comic relief, but this story revolves more around feelings of sadness, isolation, and jealousy of a parent's affections. With its emphasis on the importance of connection, this touching, uplifting story will resonate with many.

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

Jack and his father have worked out a quiet, if melancholy, routine during Jack's visits: "They made tacos. And milkshakes, too. Sometimes they talked. And sometimes they didn't." But when Dad unexpectedly adopts Jimmy, a loud, flamboyantly feathered parrot, Jack's world is turned upside down--and not, readers will suspect, for the first time. Dad perks up considerably in Jimmy's presence; the parrot is clever and funny (he mischievously swipes Jack's toothbrush and underwear), and guests love his antics. "He can walk, he can talk," Dad says, "He's amazing!" But Jack, wearing large headphones, presumably to block out the noisy bird, "wished he was amazing too." A harrowing parrot-themed nightmare--an almost luridly hued scene that breaks with the spare gouache and pencil domestics that precede and follow it--prompts Jimmy's escape. But the incident proves to be the moment of truth that both son and father need, movingly and quietly reaffirming their connection. Walker (Lottie & Walter) crafts an extraordinarily imagined book, profound in its understanding of the heart, and featuring a feathered Moby-Dick at its center--a figure capable of embodying and reflecting layers of emotional significance and meaning. Ages 4--7. Agent: Stephen Barr, Writers House. (Feb.)

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

Jack doesn't live with his dad full time, and lately when he stays with him, the house seems especially quiet. Although the text never uses the word depressed, this seems an apt description of Dad's state at the beginning of this story, which explores a wide range of emotions through expressive art. Then a green parrot named Jimmy appears on the doorstep during a storm. The bird's presence immediately enlivens the interior scenes of Dad's home with bursts of color and energy. Dad gets a kick out of Jimmy, but Jack feels jealous, and he's annoyed by the parrot's antics. A dreamscape, notable for how much busier and more vibrant it is than previous spreads, shows Jack's bedroom overrun by birds, which he dispatches by opening a window. When Jack awakens, the window actually is open, and a bright green feather rests on the sill. Without waking his dad, Jack puts on a red hoodie (a la Little Red Riding Hood) and ventures out into the rain to search for Jimmy. He doesn't encounter any wolves, but he seems lost and hopeless in an affecting image where his small form huddles at the base of a tree. Then across the spread strides Dad, umbrella aloft. The page-turn shows Dad wrapping Jack in an embrace, and closing scenes offer a hopeful portrayal of how Jimmy has changed their lives and how he might surprise them again. Megan Dowd Lambert May/June 2021 p.126(c) Copyright 2021. 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

A dramatic and remarkably unkind pet departs, leaving a child and parent room to become closer. When Jack stays at Dad's house, they sometimes talk and make tacos and milkshakes. But their kitchen table is long, and they sit apart, neither animated nor chatty. Dad has stopped telling jokes, and his son's concerned: "Jack couldn't be there all the time. The house was so quiet. He wondered if his dad was lonely. Jack knew what that felt like." Distance sits inaudibly between them. Then, Jack arrives one Tuesday night to find that a parrot--found on the doorstep after a storm--suddenly lives with them. Jimmy is bright green, boisterous, and mocking, even stealing Jack's underwear. Jack's intimidated and meekly jealous--but Dad, oblivious, finds Jimmy funny and "amazing." In a wondrous two-spread climax, hurt feelings take physical form: Jack's darkened bedroom fills with multitudinous parrots of many colors, all staring straight at him. Desperate, he opens the window and they all fly out. "Then morning arrived"--and three dropped green feathers show that Jimmy went too. Walker's artwork is delicate and understated; gentle precision gives a light touch to everything from facial expressions to chairs, shoes, and headphones. When Dad makes the change that's necessary for emotional intimacy, dialogue is spare and simple, and all the more satisfying for it. Jack and Dad appear White. A sensitive arc depicts a journey from alienation to connection. (Picture book. 4-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.