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Sunday, August 29, 2021

‘Where’s Brian’s Bottom?’ amuses with fold-out book

Where’s Brian’s Bottom?

Written and illustrated by Rob Jones

Pavilion Children’s Books, London, 2021

‘Where’s Brian’s Bottom?’ is a fun concertino or fold-out board book in which Brian, a red dachshund, can’t find his bottom.

The story begins addressing the reader, “Have you seen Brian’s bottom? He can’t find it anywhere!”

Then the reader go from one room to another in the dog's house, looking for the back of Brian. The joke is that dachshunds are such long dogs. Photos hanging in the hall show the front and back of Brian in two separate photos.


As the reader moves through five rooms of the house, we keep seeing Brian’s body snaking through each room. The narrator asks an animal friend in each room if they have seen Brian’s bottom.

Pauline, the parrot in the hall hasn’t seen Brian’s bottom. Alan the gerbil in the living room hasn’t seen it either. Dave the turtle in the kitchen says he hasn’t seen any bottoms.


Derek the duck in the bathroom is asked if Brian has been on the toilet. Derek quacks he hasn’t seen a bottom. A piece of Brian is getting a bubble bath though.

Finally, we discover Brian’s bottom next to Cheryl the cat who is lying on the bed in the bedroom. The cat looks angry and says, “Meeoww! Meeoww! Can’t you see I’m trying to sleep!” And so ends the picture book.


An extra surprise comes when you flip the book over. In reverse, the wordless story begins with Brian’s head asleep on the bed with Cheryl the cat asleep on top of him.

Brian’s body winds through the rest of the rooms one by one. His animal friends are more active now. Ducks play in the bubble bath in the bathroom. Mice have a picnic of cheese while the turtle sleeps in the kitchen.

Alan the gerbil feasts on carrots in the living room and Pauline the parrot sings in the hall. A frog and a jug of milk sit outside the front door.   

Little children will be amused by this silly picture book.  

About the Author and illustrator


Rob James
studied illustration at the University of Gloucestershire, UK, where he also discovered a love for making books, toys, and puppets. His first book, “Bernard,” won the People’s Book Prize in 2014.

Wednesday, August 11, 2021

‘Barn at Night’ gives glimpse of rural life with bedtime story

 

Barn at Night

Written by Michelle Houts and illustrated by Jen Betton

Feeding Minds Press, 2021

“Barn at Night” tells a sweet story of a girl and her father going out to the barn before dawn and again after dark to do chores.

Michelle Houts’ poetic text and Jen Betton’s soft, glowing watercolor illustrations combine to create a warm and comforting bedtime story.

The narrator, a young girl, tells how her father wakes her up early in the morning when it is still dark. The two of them bundle up and walk across crunchy snow to the barn.


They open the barn door and their steer Ed and mule Miletus greet them by pricking up an ear and braying.


Tabby cats and a Siamese cat hurry over to sit by the milk pan and wait to be fed. The girl pets them.


The narrator and her dad feed the calves a milky mixture and the cattle hay.


The girl pets the velvety muzzle of  Eleanor, a brown mare.


At night, the girl and her father return to the barn to feed the animals again. They discover that Eleanor has given birth to a foal. They watch as the baby horse gets up and takes his first steps.


When they open the barn door, they see it has started snowing outside. An owl flies overhead. The story ends as the girl thinks about how she feels safe in the barn at night.

This quiet picture book will make a nice bedtime story, and teach children about life on a farm. The publisher, Feeding Minds Press, is a project of the American Farm Bureau Foundation for Agriculture, whose mission is to build awareness and understanding of agriculture through education.

About the Author


Michelle Houts
is an award-winning author of a dozen fiction and nonfiction books for children. She writes from her restored one-room schoolhouse in Ohio. The author of “The Beef Princess of Practical County,” and “Silent Swoop: An Owl, an Egg, and a Warm Shirt Pocket,” illustrated by Deb Hoeffner. She enjoys writing about rural life and nature. Find out more at www.michellehouts.com.    

About the Illustrator


Jen Betton
is both an illustrator and a writer. Her other books include “Hedgehog Needs a Hug,” winner of Pennsylvania’s Keystone to Reading Award, which she both wrote and illustrated, and “Twilight Chant,” written by Holly Thompson. She grew up playing on friends’ farms in Pennsylvania. Illustrating “Barn at Night” gave her a delightful excuse to lurk around old barns and feed goats. She lives with her family near Dallas. You can see more of her work at www.jenbetton.com.