![]() ![]() 'Upside down and round and round' 'so many friends, so many fish. Positives of this book: - Bold colors and stark contrasts - Simple pictures - Great rhythmic text. We'd alway end up right back at Hooray for Fish. I tried other books every day, but could only get through a couple pages. ![]() ![]() "Hooray for fish!" A book that's certain to make an impressive splash, whether read to one youngster or an entire storytime circle. This is the first book my son would sit through at 5 months. "Kiss, kiss, kiss," proclaims the text as the two pucker up. Just when readers think there aren't any more fish to meet, Little Fish introduces the "one I love best, even more than all the rest" his Mom. Cousins's exuberant illustrations bring new meaning to the old saying, "plenty of fish in the sea." She packs her saturated, neon-hued pages with an undersea menagerie that includes a huge school of tiny minnow-esque fish and a comically preposterous "ele-fish," complete with trunk. However much bigger, fatter, flamboyant or even grumpier the other fish may be, Little Fish always offers up a friendly greeting: "Hello, spotty fish, stripy fish, happy fish, gripy fish," says Little Fish, flashing his bright eyes and smiling to the finny passersby (the text is set in the author's signature black, boldly roughhewn typography). Yes, he's diminutive (made to seem more so in this oversize volume), but the hero, whose orange, yellow and teal coloring brings to mind a particularly luscious frozen confection, is no chicken of the sea. Anyone who thought Cousins's Maisy was the ne plus ultra of cute had better make room for Little Fish, her latest star. ![]()
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