A duck called Brian

Al Murphy

Book - 2023

Out of breakfast food, Brian the duck goes hunting for his best friend Gregory, and although there are plenty of other ducks around doing strange and potentially interesting things, Gregory is nowhere to be found.

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Subjects
Genres
picture books
Fiction
Humorous fiction
Juvenile works
Picture books
Livres d'images
Published
New York : Scholastic Press [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Al Murphy (author)
Edition
[First American edition]
Item Description
"Originally published by Scholastic Australia in 2021."
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 25 cm
Audience
Ages 4-6.
Grades K-1.
ISBN
9781338848113
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Brian is a bright blue duck who can't find his best friend, Gregory, anywhere. The other ducks (all bright yellow) are all doing fun things, such as extreme cake baking, testing crocodile-proof diving suits, breaking the record for the world's largest duck pyramid, taming a dangerously out of control Siberian snow leopard, and participating in a mass sunbathing festival. It all sounds great, but no one has seen Gregory anywhere! Finally, fortunately, Brian falls through a magic door on Free Wish Tuesday and his wish to find Gregory comes true. This increasingly absurdist mini-adventure is full of details to tickle any reader, but specifically those who appreciate silliness. The wide and appealingly colored spreads are delightful depictions of elaborately ridiculous duck-filled shenanigans. There is a Where's Waldo--level of Easter eggs hidden within the spreads, not the least of which is that Gregory appears, slightly disguised, on many of the previous pages. Details like this, when paired with the joy-inducing scenarios and the satisfying repetition of the text, will have children scrambling to read this book again and again.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 2--4--The puns are coming fast and hard from the end papers on in this picture book that seems to be prepping children for Mo Willems's books or perhaps Dav Pilkey's Captain Underpants. Brian, cereal-loving and loyal, is a standout duck in blue, unlike his yellow cohorts, so maybe his personality was written from birth. Posters for "Ducks of Hazzard" and "Bat Duck" greet readers, as does Brian with a "Well, Hello!" Yes, says the omniscient narrator, he is blue, and what of it? The arch narration states and overstates the humor to make sure readers are paying attention: "Brian came across Peter, who was busy counting ants." Brian asks if Peter has seen his missing best friend, Gregory, and Peter replies, of course, "Sorry, no. I've been busy counting ants." This repetition will push emerging readers along as one absurd event after another unfolds, and no one has seen Gregory. When Brian falls into a magical door, he finds his best friend and they enjoy a bowl of cereal together. Shaggy duck story? Children may love the format; reading it aloud becomes tedious and the ending leaves those with expectations of real triumph in the dust. VERDICT Comic illustrations, friendship, and hundreds of ducks engaged in silly activities may be enough for some readers, but libraries better go with Mo.--Kimberly Olson Fakih

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

In this Australian import, a duck spends a silly, disastrous day searching for his friend. Brian is a bright blue duck who loves three things: his BFF, Gregory (a yellow duck with a red cap), a cold glass of milk, and his favorite cereal, Duck Nuts. Unfortunately, one day Brian wakes up and finds that he has no milk or cereal left. What a catastrophe! He must go tell Gregory all about it. But Gregory isn't in any of his usual places. So Brian starts to search. A string of increasingly bizarre encounters ensues. All of the other (yellow) ducks are too busy--counting ants, creating a crocodile-proof diving suit, or participating in a sunbathing festival--to help. Eagle-eyed readers, however, will spot Gregory in the background, always heading off to his next adventure. Murphy's squat, identical, jelly bean--shaped ducks are especially comical when packed together in a crowd--a sea of yellow, with one blue duck futilely shouting, "GREGORRRYYY!" Murphy also slips many amusing asides into the art. The ending takes a psychedelic turn, which seems a bit out of place, but it also makes perfect ridiculous sense. (This book was reviewed digitally.) Playful, absurd, and marvelous. (Picture book. 3-7) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.