The black hole debacle

Keri Claiborne Boyle

Book - 2022

"Jordie loves space. She can't believe it when she finds a black hole in her desk. But when the black hole starts snarfing everything in sight--including her dog--she realizes the black hole needs to go home. "--

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jE/Boyle
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Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
Ann Arbor, MI : Sleeping Bear Press [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Keri Claiborne Boyle (author)
Other Authors
Deborah Melmon (illustrator)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 29 cm
Audience
Ages 4-8.
ISBN
9781534111523
Contents unavailable.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 1--3--A space-themed picture book about a clever girl and a pesky black hole. From the line, "Jordie's future as an astronomer was written in the stars," young readers will be glued to the page as they follow this astronomy enthusiast trying to control a troublesome black hole. Finding it hidden in her desk at school, Jordie struggles to stop the black hole from gobbling up everything around it! A resourceful, thoughtful, clever girl, she manages to keep things contained until it swallows her trusty dog, Neptune. She plunges into the black hole after her pup and saves the day. Full-color pencil sketches and painted backgrounds create engaging scenes. The illustrator enhances the action and adventure in the story; when objects are sucked into the black hole they become "noodled." Long stretched-out objects and extra long wiener dogs will make kids laugh and keep them turning the pages. Standout sections include the illustrations of space, especially the cover. Melmon uses rich colors and beautiful galactic details such as constellations, planets, asteroids, and more. VERDICT Pair this fun and engaging space time hoot with read-alikes such as Jon Klassen's The Rock from Space and Adam Rex's Pluto Gets the Call.--Meaghan Nichols

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Astro nut Jordie fully appreciates the gravity of the situation when a black hole appears inside her school desk. In an episode that leaves no pun unturned, the unwelcome if exciting visitor, showing "less-than-stellar" manners, quickly gobbles down Jordie's crayons, lunchbox, and other stuff--and worse, once she contrives to sneak it home, everything in her room (except a pair of unicorn underwear), including her dog, Neptune. There's nothing for it but to take the plunge herself despite the discomfort of feeling her body stretching out like a noodle (a gravity effect that astrophysicists, as Boyle explains in an afterword, evocatively call being "spaghettified") and the fact that there's no obvious way to escape since black holes trap even light. In the cartoon illustrations, Jordie, a light-skinned child with unruly blond hair, faces off against a growing black blot with googly eyes as her parents, her brown-skinned teacher, and her racially diverse classmates remain oblivious. Readers may wonder how she's ever going to get out of her predicament, but, being observant as well as clever (a good combination for a budding scientist), she has a snappy solution that she pulls out of her pocket as soon as she's gathered up her noodled pooch and other possessions. Then she boots the voracious vagrant into the sky, where it can "graze galaxies and slurp stars" to its heart's content. (This book was reviewed digitally.) Readers will be sucked in despite the certainty of spaghettification. (Picture book. 6-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.