07/01/2024
PreS-Gr 2—It's never too soon to start bringing toddlers and babies into the wondrous details of Brett's books, so there is much to love about this sturdy 2017 retelling of Goldilocks's story, now in a board book and therefore a portable, chewable form. The text has not been altered; in the waters just off Okinawa, Kiniro, a mermaid is drawn to a small seashell house. When she enters, she finds a table set for breakfast. She samples each dish, but prefers the smallest one and finishes it. Her puffer fish friend observes all, including her discovery by the octopus family when they return to their home. Vibrant illustrations in shades of turquoise, pink, green, and blue include fantastical border art, perhaps for older siblings to help explore. VERDICT This has always been a book to share, but now it's ready for little hands. For folktale and fairy tale shelves, too.
★ 06/19/2017
In this dazzling remix, Brett (Gingerbread Christmas) sets “Goldilocks and the Three Bears” under the sea. The bears turn into octopuses, dressed in the straw hats and indigo-dyed coats of rural Japan, and Goldilocks becomes Kiniro, a mermaid with black hair and golden scales (“kin-iro” is Japanese for gold). A sweet twist at the outset imagines Otosan and Okosan (Japanese for father and mother) putting a new hat on Baby: “Baby did not like the floppy new hat. The hat was not happy, either.” The hat is actually a ray, and although Kiniro ruins as many of the octopuses’ possessions as Goldilocks does (“Someone has been crunching on my crustaceans”), she leaves Baby a much nicer piece of headwear. Brett’s brightly colored, highly detailed art shines in this aquatic setting as she embellishes the octopuses’ dwelling with shells, coral, and tropical fish that swim in and out of the windows. Small, jewel-like vignettes set into the main spreads reveal what’s happening elsewhere (Kiniro sleeping innocently offstage as the octopus family returns). Brett’s fans will rejoice, and she’ll make new ones, too. Ages 4–8. (Aug.)
★ "In this dazzling remix, Brett sets 'Goldilocks and the Three Bears' under the sea. The bears turn into octopuses, dressed in the straw hats and indigo-dyed coats of rural Japan, and Goldilocks becomes Kiniro, a mermaid with black hair and golden scales (“kin-iro” is Japanese for gold). . . Brett’s brightly colored, highly detailed art shines in this aquatic setting as she embellishes the octopuses’ dwelling with shells, coral, and tropical fish that swim in and out of the windows. . . Brett’s fans will rejoice, and she’ll make new ones, too."—Publishers Weekly, starred review
"In an aquatic version of 'Goldilocks and the Three Bears,' Kiniro, the beautiful mermaid, is intrigued by the mystique and beauty of [a] little seashell house. . . Not only is this fractured fairy tale a delight to read, there is also an adorable side story skillfully told in the border art as only Brett can. Set in the waters off of the coast of Okinawa, this colorful picture book is exquisite."—School Library Journal
"Sure to please Brett's fans."—Kirkus Reviews
2017-06-27
More "The Three Bears" than "The Little Mermaid," Brett's latest picture book was inspired by her visits to Okinawa and the New England Aquarium, where she encountered the Pacific octopus. The titular mermaid is named Kiniro, and her Japanese-inspired name, dark rather than golden tresses, and East Asian features are links to Brett's Japanese inspiration for the story. Various illustrative details of the setting and characters' costuming also seem tied to Japan, but the text is firmly rooted in the very English "The Three Bears." While swimming with her friend Puffy (a puffer fish), Kiniro happens upon the house of an octopus family. In keeping with the folk-tale source material, Otosan (the father), Okasan (the mother), and Baby, an octopus family, have all gone out, leaving Kiniro to try their breakfast, their chairs, and their beds. In each instance she prefers Baby's things, and she drifts off to sleep in a clamshell bed. Throughout, Brett's signature sidebar illustrations show the octopus family on their outing, each wearing a hat. (A subplot about the octopuses' hats detracts from the story with superfluous detail.) When they return, they are upset by Kiniro's intrusion, but Puffy protects her, and they escape with a new friend in tow—a stingray who had been Baby's hat and which Kiniro replaces with a tiara. Not quite just right but sure to please Brett's fans. (Picture book. 3-5)