NOVEMBER 2020 - AudioFile
Author and narrator Neil Gaiman uses his best pirate voice to deliver this high-spirited romp. Two siblings are left in the care of unlikely babysitter Long John McRon, ship’s cook. Soon after their parents depart for the evening, more guests arrive: “The door was opened. In they came: A pirate crew. They were not tame.” But what to have for dinner? As the pirates create a unique feast, Gaiman growls “Arr” and makes the most of the clever wordplay—“Leeks are good (except in vessels)”—and funny rhymes—“smorgasbord” with “pirate sword.” Parents might need to brush up their own pirate voices because this short, silly adventure is sure to become a favorite of young listeners. J.M.D. © AudioFile 2020, Portland, Maine
Publishers Weekly
11/02/2020
Babysitting two skeptical siblings, Long John McRon, Ship’s Cook, and his pirate crew concoct a buccaneer-pleasing repast: “Pirate Stew, Pirate Stew,/ eat it and you won’t be blue./ You can be a pirate too!” What could possibly go awry? With consummately inventive Newbery Medalist Gaiman at the helm, nothing short of boatloads. In rollicking verse, the rowdy chefs, elaborately costumed and coiffed in Riddell’s freewheeling illustrations, initially toss relatively tame ingredients into their golden cooking pot—“Start with onions, start with carrots./ Add the seeds that feeds the parrots./ Pulverized with heavy pestles, leeks are good (except in vessels)”—but the recipe becomes comically slapdash with the addition of gold doubloons, cannonballs, “a slice of plank for walking,/ and some extra Arrs for talking.” The whimsy takes further flight when Long John McRon pilots a post-supper journey to a doughnut shop after the children’s house morphs into an airborne pirate ship, and the longtime collaborators top off this delightful yarn with a wry parental twist. Ages 4–8. (Dec.)
From the Publisher
"Readers may wish that Talk Like a Pirate Day lasted all year long." — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
"Highly enjoyable, with Gaiman’s silly, singsong verses the perfect ingredient for a raucous read-aloud. Riddell’s predictably fabulous illustrations are ablaze with color and detail." — Booklist
"What could possibly go awry? With consummately inventive Newbery Medalist Gaiman at the helm, nothing short of boatloads... [A] delightful yarn." — Publishers Weekly
"This is a lively pirate outing for any fan of nautical or just plain silly humor." — Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books
Booklist
"Highly enjoyable, with Gaiman’s silly, singsong verses the perfect ingredient for a raucous read-aloud. Riddell’s predictably fabulous illustrations are ablaze with color and detail."
Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books
"This is a lively pirate outing for any fan of nautical or just plain silly humor."
Booklist
"Highly enjoyable, with Gaiman’s silly, singsong verses the perfect ingredient for a raucous read-aloud. Riddell’s predictably fabulous illustrations are ablaze with color and detail."
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
"This is a lively pirate outing for any fan of nautical or just plain silly humor."
Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books
"This is a lively pirate outing for any fan of nautical or just plain silly humor."
School Library Journal
03/01/2021
Gr 1–2—Oh, the day you find out your babysitter is a pirate does not bode well. Blonde, blue-eyed mother and Black goatee-sporting father are going out, and Long John McRon, ship's cook, arrives with all the tropes in place, from a peg leg and (literally) a left hook to a blue beard and a crutch. As jolly goes, he's got plenty, as he coaxes his young charges, biracial siblings with black hair and light brown skin, to join him and the hordes he invites in, who resemble all the pirates in fiction, including Captain Hook from Neverland. The siblings feel doomed, and in Riddell's raucous and crowded illustrations, readers will understand what the pair are up against. And for dinner? "Pirate Stew! Pirate Stew! Pirate Stew for me and you!" The hitch is that eating the stew turns one into a pirate, so the siblings opt for specially procured donuts. But when the mother and father come home, a bit peckish? These children are now the happy offspring of "Pirate Mom" and "Pirate Dad." This is royal fun for all, in rhymes that have plenty of openings for chanting along. VERDICT For noisy read-alouds and a punchline kids won't soon forget, this is a picture book to hoist onto every shelf.—Kimberly Olson Fakih, School Library Journal
NOVEMBER 2020 - AudioFile
Author and narrator Neil Gaiman uses his best pirate voice to deliver this high-spirited romp. Two siblings are left in the care of unlikely babysitter Long John McRon, ship’s cook. Soon after their parents depart for the evening, more guests arrive: “The door was opened. In they came: A pirate crew. They were not tame.” But what to have for dinner? As the pirates create a unique feast, Gaiman growls “Arr” and makes the most of the clever wordplay—“Leeks are good (except in vessels)”—and funny rhymes—“smorgasbord” with “pirate sword.” Parents might need to brush up their own pirate voices because this short, silly adventure is sure to become a favorite of young listeners. J.M.D. © AudioFile 2020, Portland, Maine
Kirkus Reviews
★ 2020-09-29
This book could serve as a recruiting drive for pirates, mostly because of the hair.
Pirate hair, in Riddell’s illustrations, is glorious. It’s powder blue, or it’s peaked like twin mountains or forms crests like waves in the ocean. More important, the pirates have joyous, irresistible smiles. But the two children who find themselves babysat by these benign buccaneers are still suspicious. The pirates in this picture book don’t follow the rules of ordinary seagoers. When they make their titular stew, the ingredients include “a Jolly Roger” and “half a sack of gold doubloons.” If you eat it, they say, “You’ll become a pirate too!” The artwork also blithely veers from the text. Gaiman says that the chief pirate has gray hair, but in Riddell’s delicately lined cartoons his beard is a bright, cheerful blue, proving that no one should ever trust pirates or artists or children’s-book authors. But it’s hard to be afraid of buccaneers who shout things like “Toodle-pip!” The crew is diverse enough—in wardrobe and in racial presentation—that almost any reader can feel welcome. The children have brown skin and come from an interracial family, with a White mother and a Black father. The rhythm of the rhyming text is instantly catchy, though it’s so dense that a word and its rhyme occasionally become separated when the layout places them on different pages. (This book was reviewed digitally with 9.8-by-15-inch double-page spreads viewed at actual size.)
Readers may wish that Talk Like a Pirate Day lasted all year long. (Picture book. 4-9)