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Summary
Summary
Ever wonder what goes on inside the mind of a toddler?
Are you sure you want to know?
Okay, here goes. . .
I want to put on Mommy's shoes.
Get Mommy's shoes off my feet NOW.
I'm starving!
I want to play with Daddy's phone!
I need to push some buttons!
In this high-energy, oh-so-true account of life with a toddler, readers are treated to the unique workings of little minds. Ready?
Author Notes
Jason Good has appeared on Comedy Central's Live at Gotham, and Howard Stern's Kill or Be Killed. He is currently developing a 30-minute weekly series about his life trying to juggle his three careers: writing, stand-up comedy and fatherhood. His adult humor book is forthcoming from Chronicle in 2014. He lives in Minnesota with his wife and two small sons, and enjoys making them laugh more than anyone. Visit him online at www.jasongood.net.
Jarrett J. Krosoczka has authored and illustrated numerous picture books and graphic novels. His Lunch Lady series has twice won a Children's Choice Book Award, and was nominated for a Will Eisner Comic Industry Award. In 2013, Jarrett makes his chapter book debut with Platypus Police Squad: The Frog Who Croaked . His Punk Farm and Lunch Lady series are both currently in development as feature films. While Jarrett awaits seeing his work adapted for the silver screen, he can be heard on The Book Report with JJK, his radio segment on Sirius XM's Kids Place Live. Jarrett is happily living out his childhood dream in Northampton, Massachusetts, where he resides with his wife and daughters and their pug, Ralph Macchio. Visit him online at www.studiojjk.com.
Reviews (5)
School Library Journal Review
PreS-K-This book provides a look at the inner workings of a toddler's mind. "You really want to know what he's thinking?. . . . Really? Okay, brace yourself." The boy's off-the-wall thoughts are translated into a frenzied reality as he explores, from trying on his mama's high-heeled shoes to picking up the family pet by its head. His fascination with every button in his house occupies his thoughts. When easily distracted, his attention immediately flits back to his family in dramatic fashion. "`Wait, where's Daddy? Where's the cat? Where' s Mommy? MOMMY LEFT FOREVER!'" The high-energy incredulity of the boy's realizations, such as when he discovers his toes or notices he urinated on himself, dominates each scene until he finally succumbs to sleep. Colors bleed outside of coarse charcoal lines to convey a childlike exuberance. Mixed-media illustrations, from art digitally created by acrylic paints, watercolors, and oil pastels, maintain the loud energy found within the child's home. Even brightly patterned wallpaper adds bold color to the decor. In a manic glimpse into the absence of impulse control, this child's zany exuberance knows no bounds.-Meg Smith, Cumberland County Public Library, Fayetteville, NC (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
Good, a writer and comedian, created a small viral sensation in 2011 by blogging a list entitled "Approximately Three Minutes Inside the Head of My Two-Year-Old." Krosoczka (Peanut Butter and Jellyfish) turns a (less profane) version of the list into a jumble of vignettes starring a mischievous boy, whose behavior slips and slides along a continuum that ranges from "Mommy left FOREVER!" (no, she's right there in the kitchen) to "I think I peed." As stories go, it's basically a series of rapidly shifting emotional gears: "I'm tired. I'm not tired. This shirt itches. STOP ASKING ME IF I'M TIRED." The boy has enough agency and independence to be an appealing hero (he seems closer to a preschooler than the original list's toddler), but the action is surprisingly mild-mannered; because the scenes and literal captions never build to anything, the pages quickly take on a catalog feel. Nevertheless, weary parents-as well those responsible for some of that weariness-will find it easy to recognize themselves. Ages 3-6. Author's agent: Courtney Miller-Callihan, Sanford J. Greenburger Associates. Illustrator's agent: Rebecca Sherman, Writers House. (Jan.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Horn Book Review
From playing with TV remotes to trying on Mommy's shoes, readers are privy to one toddler's thoughts as they lurch confusingly around in his head. This disquieting volume, with digitally assembled acrylic, watercolor, and oil-pastel illustrations loudly illustrating the frenzy, is more manic than humorous: "Now my pants are wet. Wow, is that my toe? / Wait, where's Daddy? (c) Copyright 2015. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
A rambunctious child tries to find outlets for his surfeit of energy.As the title implies, this little boy is into everything: Daddy's phone, Mommy's shoes, the kitchen appliancesyou name it, he'll fuss with it. Written in first person, Good's text ends up coming across more like an adult's impression of a busy child than it does the voice of a little one, and it lacks the structure necessary to deliver a complete story. Instead, the book delivers a familiar character study of the into-everything toddler. Krosoczka's digitally assembled, multimedia art attempts to capture the protagonist's high energy with multiple scenes showing him in midaction as he explores the world around him at a frantic pace, but the illustrations end up being largely redundant to rather than expansive of the text. Furthermore, the sequence of events has no apparent orderspreads could be rearranged without any impact on the book as a whole, expect for the ultimate, predictable closing scene that shows the child tuckered out after his busy day and fast asleep in a chair. Ultimately, Good and Krosoczka's collaboration seems to serve more as a validation for adult perceptions of toddler behavior than it acts as a story for actual toddlers to enjoy. Not a must. read. book. (Picture book. 2-4) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Comedian Good has transformed his blog post Approximately Three Minutes Inside the Head of My Two-Year-Old into a frenetic picture book. There is not much of a story here, but unlike other picture books based on a viral phenomenon (like What Does the Fox Say?, 2013, for instance), familiarity with the source material is not necessary to understand the appeal. The little boy at the heart of the book ricochets from impulse to impulse: I'm tired. I'm not tired. This shirt itches. STOP ASKING ME IF I'M TIRED. I wanna put on that awesome song that annoys you. What is UP with my shirt? Krosoczka's illustrations focus on the tousled-hair toddler, with the other players in his life (adults, pets) on the periphery. They intervene to prevent disaster but otherwise neither contain nor keep up with the boy's unfiltered energy. This book will attract attention and be in demand, but it will likely be the adult readers who will most relate to the experience.--Dean, Kara Copyright 2015 Booklist