Reviews for Crocodiles need kisses too

Publishers Weekly
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Toe-tapping verse by Colby (Captain Bling’s Christmas Plunder) suggests that creatures who seem homely, scary, or fierce want love as much as anyone: “Despite their lumpy, bumpy hide,/ toothy mouths stretched open wide,// just like me and just like you,/ crocodiles need kisses, too.” Dullaghan (Max Attacks) paints two spreads for each creature, the first with the animal’s threatening features more prominently on display, the second a sweeter and fuzzier view. A parade of fierce animals appears: vultures, sharks (“Forget their ragged, jagged grins,/ turning, churning, circling fins”), tarantulas (“Just like me and just like you,/ tarantulas need tickles too”). Then readers discover that the narrator is a parent speaking to a child—a child in a crocodile costume who’s having a meltdown: “Regardless of your smashing tail,/ howling cry and yowling wail,” the parent says, “children need affection too.” The lesson that everyone deserves devotion is one worth remembering. Ages 2–5. Author’s agent: Kathleen Rushall, Andrea Brown Literary. Illustrator’s agent: Scott Hull, Scott Hull Assoc. (Apr.)


School Library Journal
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Toddler-PreS–This charming picture book suggests that every living creature, no matter the species, needs to feel accepted. Even though crocodiles have "toothy mouths," porcupines have "prickly spines," and great white sharks have "jagged grins," their young all need to be loved and nurtured. Colby has chosen some of the most conventionally unlovable animals, including vultures, rattlesnakes, gorillas, and tarantulas, and her rhyming couplets convince readers that those creatures are worthy of affection. "Never mind their pouncing paws, raging roars and scratching claws, just like me and just like you, tigers need some snuggles too." Three pages of illustrations are devoted to each critter being hugged or kissed or cuddled by another of its species. Large, colorful illustrations, employing acrylic paint and digital pixels, appear in a variety of sizes and use simple shapes to create friendly-looking animals while sweetly depicting the love they share. VERDICT A great addition.—Maryann H. Owen, Oak Creek Public Library, WI


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Even rough animals need affection.Rhyming verses with bang-on scansion declare that animals who are considered noncuddly still need cuddles: "Despite their lumpy, bumpy hide, / toothy mouths stretched open wide, // just like me and just like you, / crocodiles need kisses too." These porcupines, rattlesnakes, vultures, sharks, tigers, tarantulas, and gorillas also need squeezes, nuzzles, smooches, and tickles. The animals' textually described dangerousness juxtaposes with the art, which shows gentle creatures: A rattlesnake's "pointy fangs" are too rounded to puncture anything; tigers evoke mischievous toddlers; a porcupine's "prickly spines, / sharpened quills raised up in lines," far from being raised, actually angle downward as the critter peers meekly out from behind a tree. A shark fin is daunting, and a tarantula's huge legs crawling out toward readers may startle them, but both sharks and tarantulas have affable smiles and harmless, curved bodies after each page turn reveals the whole creature. An ending twist changes the crocodile into a (brown-skinned) child in a crocodile suit, receiving hugs from a (lighter-skinned) adult. Dullaghan's illustrations use acrylic paint texture well. However, they have a casual air and a lack of punch that, instead of creating meaningful juxtaposition with the verses, dilute the text's hardiness and specificity. Sometimes the art leans toward the saccharinerattlesnake bodies forming a heartand Colby's cloying ultimate moral that "children need affection too" isn't particularly useful to child or adult readers.Genial but forgettable. (Picture book. 2-5) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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