★ 04/13/2015
So what’s it going to be, kid? Are you a Rude Cake or a Giant Cyclops? Watkins, a former Sendak Fellow, debuts with an absurdist “Goofus and Gallant” story for the 21st century, about a thuggish, pink two-layer cake. “Rude cakes never say please, and they never say thank you, and they sometimes take things that don’t belong to them,” writes Watkins as the inconsiderate, ungrateful, and selfish cake bullies other sweets and disrespects his four-tier parents. But when the cake is spirited away to a land where goofy—but extremely polite—Giant Cyclopses use cakes for “jaunty little hats,” the cake discovers a way of life that’s kind, patient, and affirming (“Giant Cyclopses always say thank you, and they always say please”). Watkins’s delicate lines and translucent colors give his story a sly, understated humor, and his liberal use of verbal asides (“Seriously,” says the cake as it sulks in a tub, “I’m a cake... How dirty can I be?”) make a familiar message about thoughtfulness as fresh and tasty as his confectionary cast. Ages 3–5. Agent: Rosemary Stimola, Stimola Literary Studio. (June)
"A truly surreal story, crammed with hilarious details and gently laced with an important lesson."School Library Journal, starred review
"A truly surreal story, crammed with hilarious details and gently laced with an important lesson."School Library Journal, starred review
"A truly surreal story, crammed with hilarious details and gently laced with an important lesson."School Library Journal, starred review
"Packed with hilarious details and grin-bringing surprises - and it works in a lovely message, too."Design Mom
"Packed with hilarious details and grin-bringing surprises - and it works in a lovely message, too."Design Mom
"Packed with hilarious details and grin-bringing surprises - and it works in a lovely message, too."Design Mom
"Kids will be asking-oh so nicely-to 'Read it again,please!'"-Booklist, starred review
"Kids will be asking-oh so nicely-to 'Read it again,please!'"-Booklist, starred review
"Kids will be asking-oh so nicely-to 'Read it again,please!'"-Booklist, starred review
"In very few words and completely without preaching, Rude Cakes lets us laugh our way through a lesson on social skills and self reflection."-Wink Books
"In very few words and completely without preaching, Rude Cakes lets us laugh our way through a lesson on social skills and self reflection."-Wink Books
"In very few words and completely without preaching, Rude Cakes lets us laugh our way through a lesson on social skills and self reflection."-Wink Books
2016 Ezra Jack Keats Book Award honor winner
2016 Ezra Jack Keats Book Award honor winner
2016 Ezra Jack Keats Book Award honor winner
"Rude Cakes is a classic cautionary tale that also manages to be original, subversive, and very funny."Sergio Ruzzier, author of A Letter for Leo
"Rude Cakes is a classic cautionary tale that also manages to be original, subversive, and very funny."Sergio Ruzzier, author of A Letter for Leo
"Rude Cakes is a classic cautionary tale that also manages to be original, subversive, and very funny."Sergio Ruzzier, author of A Letter for Leo
"Makes a familiar message about thoughtfulness fresh and tasty."-Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Makes a familiar message about thoughtfulness fresh and tasty."-Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Makes a familiar message about thoughtfulness fresh and tasty."-Publishers Weekly, starred review
"The best picture-book debut of 2015 is Rowboat Watkins' Rude Cakes. "Phil Nel, Nine Kinds of Pie and The Niblings
"The best picture-book debut of 2015 is Rowboat Watkins' Rude Cakes. "Phil Nel, Nine Kinds of Pie and The Niblings
"The best picture-book debut of 2015 is Rowboat Watkins' Rude Cakes. "Phil Nel, Nine Kinds of Pie and The Niblings
"This witty, original debut... with adorably scruffy art and a clever, gag-filled story, Watkins brings a refreshing irreverence to the often deadly mind-your-manners genre."The New York Times
"This witty, original debut... with adorably scruffy art and a clever, gag-filled story, Watkins brings a refreshing irreverence to the often deadly mind-your-manners genre."The New York Times
"This witty, original debut... with adorably scruffy art and a clever, gag-filled story, Watkins brings a refreshing irreverence to the often deadly mind-your-manners genre."The New York Times
"The zaniest picture book premise of the year."Boston Globe
★ 04/01/2015
PreS-Gr 1—In this amusing and downright bizarre tale, readers learn about cakes whose dispositions aren't nearly as sweet as their flavoring. One bratty confection, who never waits his turn and refuses to obey his parents, finally gets his comeuppance when a cyclops reaches into his bedroom window one night and eagerly scoops him up. Slyly subverting expectations, the author explains that cyclops don't eat cakes—they enjoy wearing them as hats. But cyclops are far more considerate, and the one-eyed creature quickly returns the dessert to his home, resulting in a kinder, gentler cake. Children learning to say, "Please" and "Thank you" will delight in the over-the-top rude behavior here, such as the cake exploding with anger at a tiny marshmallow and chocolate muffin. The use of dynamic, large fonts for emphasis, hilarious dialogue conveyed through speech bubbles, and the exaggerated expressions and responses of characters add further to the zany flavor of this story. Digitally created, with pencil and ink, the cartoonlike illustrations match the tone of the text, quirk for quirk. The strange creations depicted here have an adorably grotesque feel: the cakes are multilayered concoctions perched precariously on tiny peglike legs, while the monsters are toothy, big-eyed, hairy ovals. Watkins has whipped up a truly surreal story, crammed with hilarious details and gently laced with an important lesson; pair this one with Steve Antony's Please Mr. Panda (Scholastic, 2015) for a fun primer on manners. VERDICT This entertaining offering will make for a riotous storytime.—Mahnaz Dar, School Library Journal