Sunny the meerkat lives with his enormous family in the Kalahari desert. They are all very close ...so close, in fact, that one day Sunny decides he's had enough and packs his bags. He's off to visit his mongoose cousins. But from the watery world of the Marsh Mongoose to the nocturnal lifestyle of the Malagasy Mongoose, Sunny just doesn't fit in. And who's that shadowy figure who seems to be following him around? A brilliant picture book from the winner of the Kate Greenaway Medal. About the AuthorEmily Gravett is a graduate of Brighton University and the winner of the 2004 Macmillan Prize for Illustration. A traveller in her youth, Emily has now settled in Brighton with her partner, their young daughter and two pet rats. Her first picture book, the inimitable WOLVES (978-1-4050-5362-4), won the Kate Greenaway Medal 2005 and the Nestle Children's Book Prize Bronze Award. Emily's fifth picture book for Macmillan, LITTLE MOUSE'S BIG BOOK OF FEARS (978-1-4050-8948-7), will also be published in August 2007. ReviewsSunny the Meerkat lives in the Kalahari Desert, where it is "VERY dry and VERY hot," writes Gravett (Wolves), winner of the U.K.'s Kate Greenaway Medal. What's more, his large family is "VERY close. Sometimes Sunny thinks they are TOO close." He sets out to see if his Mongoose family relatives inhabit more salubrious digs, sending home postcards that are tipped into the pages like flaps. "Dear Mum, Dad and Everyone," reads a postcard from the rainforest, where he visits his Liberian Mongoose cousins. "It is raining. QUITE HARD. Hope the weather is better at home. Loads of love from Sunny Rainy... P.S. Great Aunt Maureen was right. I should have packed an umbrella." Finally realizing that there's no place like one's natural habitat, Sunny returns home to a joyous celebration. The book's novelty can't quite conceal that the humor is stretched-at least in the text; the pictures of the meerkat blend naturalist observations with nutty anthropomorphic details (e.g., an adult meerkat rests under a beach umbrella while giant ants perform acrobatic stunts before his electric fan). The handsome watercolor and ink illustrations make the most of the elongated horizontal format; Gravett conveys not just how a landscape looks, but also how its lighting and climate feels to a very small mammal. The scenes among Sunny's nocturnal cousins are particularly striking. And there's no denying that her meerkat have tons of animal magnetism. Ages 4-8. (Sept.) Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information. |