Tiny T. Rex and the perfect valentine

Jonathan Stutzman

Book - 2020

Tiny T. Rex wants to make the perfect valentine for his friend, Pointy, but the paint spills, and the sparkles are all over the place, and soon he has a big mess--but Pointy assures him that just being a friend is the best valentine of all.

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Subjects
Published
San Francisco : Chronicle Books 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Jonathan Stutzman (author)
Other Authors
Jay Fleck (illustrator)
Item Description
On board pages.
Cover title.
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 16 cm
Audience
Ages 0-3.
ISBN
9781452184890
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This board book starring the pint-size, short-armed protagonist of the eponymous picture book series finds Tiny T. Rex with another dilemma. Tiny wants to make a valentine for best friend Pointy, a coral-colored stegosaurus. After all, it's "the best way to show how BIG your heart feels for someone," Tiny informs the audience in first-person perspective. But when Tiny wheels out red paint, the can tips all over the teeny theropod, and an idea involving glitter results in similar chaos. Undeterred, Tiny tries again and again, until finally: "The only thing I have made for Pointy is a very big, very messy... mess," Tiny admits, as Fleck's charming art shows the dinosaur in a pile of glitter, covered in paper hearts, glue, springs, and scraps. But Pointy, of course, is not disappointed. A predictably sweet dino-centric take on a classic theme: the heart behind a gift mattering more than the gift itself. Ages 2--4. (Dec.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Even when well-intended plans go awry, sometimes "I love you" is plastered all over one's face. Tiny T. Rex wants to make the perfect valentine for friend Pointy, a stegosaurus. It's a noble ideal, but perfection is more elusive than the little theropod realized. That's the premise of this charming board book that succinctly celebrates love, friendship, aspiration, perseverance, limitations, and the notion that it's the thought that counts--especially when it's clearly reflected in effort. Like its protagonist, this book is small, but it's rich in value and works on every level. The artwork has an elegant simplicity that beautifully balances color, personality, and clever detail. A panel of Tiny designing the card in chalk on a blackboard, for example, reveals the scale of the little dino's intentions: a giant heart, ribbons, smaller hearts dangling from springs, heart-shaped balloons, and fireworks, all much larger than Tiny. The project is clearly a labor of love: Tiny sweats, tugging a bucket of paint--"Pointy's favorite color!"--but the bucket spills on the artist, not the valentine. Trying to make the card "extra fancy," Tiny is covered in glitter. Tiny rips, snips, and rerips, trying to make the perfect heart; misspells Pointy; and glues springs and hearts all over everything. When Tiny apologizes for having no valentine for Pointy, Pointy recognizes immediately that the perfect valentine is a friend like Tiny. A sweet reminder that love is best measured in actions. (Board book. 1-5) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.