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Summary
Summary
"Clever fun." -- Booklist
"[A] delightful geometric tale...that kids will surely love." -- School Library Journal
From award-winning author Anne Miranda comes a rollicking rhyming story about an unruly gang of sixteen geometric shapes who get tangled in the neighborhood jungle gym until their friend comes to their rescue and order is restored. Perfect for fans of Chicka Chicka Boom Boom !
One day a little circle,
just as happy as could be,
got caught inside a jungle gym,
and couldn't wiggle free.
When the neighborhood shapes go climbing on the park jungle gym the last thing they expect is a tangle . First the circle, next the triangle and then the square. One by one soon all sixteen shapes are trapped. They push and pull and tumble and cry for help . Who will save them? One special shape can set the others free. Can you guess which one it is? This charming story makes learning the names of sixteen shapes as easy as a day in the park.
Author Notes
Anne Miranda is an American who has lived Madrid, Spain, since 1994. She is the mother of two grown sons and is a writer of books and educational materials for very young children. Her books include Night Songs , which was selected to be part of the Society of Illustrator's Show and was named Bank Street College Children's Book of the Year; To Market, To Market (illustrated by Janet Stephens), which was an Abby Honor Book, and ALA Notable Children's Book, a Golden Kite Honor Book for Illustration, and a Flicker Tale Nominee; Beep! Beep! (illustrated by David Murphy), which was a Parents' Choice Gold Award; Glad Monster Sad Monster (illustrated by Caldecott Award winner Ed Emberly); and Tangled (illustrated by Eric Comstock). Visit her website at AnneMiranda.com.
Eric Comstock's very first picture book was the Charlie Piechart and the Case of the Missing Pizza Slice by Marilyn Sadler which was selected to be part of the Original Art Show at the Society of Illustrators. His second book The Great Dictionary Caper by Judy Sierra was called "Peppy...entertaining and educational" in a starred review in Booklist . He lives in Austin, Texas. You can see more of Eric's work at EricComstock.us.
Reviews (4)
School Library Journal Review
PreS-Gr 2--One day a perfectly innocent and adorable circle is playing on the jungle gym when she gets stuck inside it. Unable to extricate herself, she asks her friend Triangle to set her free her but he also ends up trapped. The same cruel fate befalls an ellipse and a group of pentagons who all bravely try to untangle the others but end up imprisoned. Help appears in the form of a straight and narrow line, who takes immediate command of the situation. With a clever plan utilizing some bystander shapes, they knock the jungle gym down freeing those inside. Line then explains to the jungle gym that she should make her spaces wider and soon all the shapes are able to play without peril. The rhyming text begs to be read aloud and will be an entertaining introduction to various shapes. Comstock's playful and expressive digital illustrations are done in warm tones and mimic chalkboard drawings. There is a gallery of shapes at the end that kids will surely love studying. VERDICT This delightful geometric tale is a must have for most libraries.--Amy Nolan, St. Joseph Public Library, MI
Publisher's Weekly Review
There is trouble at the playground when a pink circle gets stuck inside a jungle gym. In Comstock's retro-feeling illustrations, shape after colorful shape tries to help, each getting caught, until the playground structure is a chaotic tangle of geometric characters ("What a horror! What a mess! The shapes could not untwine," Miranda writes). Just then, a "straight and narrow line," comes bounding onto the scene. After eyeing the angles, she conjures up a plan and deputizes a prism and a sphere, who together form themselves into a lever and free their shape friends from the jam. Though how the lever's force does what the stuck shapes cannot is not particularly clear, the characters' willingness to help and their collaborative problem-solving make for an animated tale of community. Postscript material includes a chart of geometric shapes found in the book. Ages 4--8. (June)
Kirkus Review
Two- and three-dimensional shapes must problem-solve when several get stuck while at the playground. "One day a little circle, just as happy as could be / got caught inside the jungle gym, and couldn't wiggle free." Several friends try to help her, either ineffectually or, worse, getting stuck themselves. As crowds gather, a line arrives, and she devises the perfect plan. With the help of a prism and a sphere, she sets up a lever and pops the shapes free. Miranda's rhyming verses sometimes stumble. Comstock's shape characters, with noodlelike arms and legs, mostly sport similar expressions of dismay or happiness. His depictions of the jungle gym fail to make it clear how the shapes are trapped; they look as though they could just slip out. Only two shapes are specifically gendered female in the text. Both are pink (at least one other pink shape is explicitly male); one has a bow atop her head, the other, who wears glasses, has eyelashes. The mix of 2- and 3-D shapes makes the audience tough to pin down. Some shapes will be mystifying to children still sorting them out: The word "ellipse" is used instead of "oval," and in a scene where crowds gather, the text refers to "points" joining the throng; readers may not know what they are till they reach the ending shape gallery, which shows points as a group of dots.There are so many shape-recognition books that are so much better; this one should remain tangled. (Picture book. 3-8) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
When a little pink circle, sporting a wide grin and a line-drawn bow, gets trapped inside the jungle gym, her friends all different shapes try to help her get free, but one by one, they all get trapped as well. Soon, the town is in a complete frenzy, as more shapes gather to figure out how to free the group now hopelessly tangled. And then who should appear but a line, who, after carefully examining the situation from every angle, comes up with a mathematical solution. This is tailor-made for read-alouds; an engaging rhyme and energetic narrative, with some words set in bolder or more dynamic fonts (""What a horror! What a mess! / The shapes could not untwine. / Then rushing to the rescue, / came a straight and narrow line""), set the tone. Comstock's retro monochromatic illustrations sneak in plenty of spatial and geometric concepts, and his cast of shapes has plenty of personality in their drawn-in facial expressions. A glossary of shapes provides opportunities for further learning in this bit of clever fun.--Maggie Reagan Copyright 2019 Booklist