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Little Babymouse and the Christmas Cupcakes

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Graphic-novel darling and kid-favorite Babymouse makes her picture-book debut in a Christmas story . . . all about cupcakes! (Typical.)
 
Thank goodness Babymouse ate all of the Christmas cookies her mom made for Santa. Now she can make him something he really wants—CUPCAKES! But wait . . . what’s that rumbling in the other room? OH NO! A DRAGON!!!!! Can Sir Babymouse defeat her fiery foe and save Christmas?! Or at least save a cupcake or two? Maybe not. . . .
Jennifer and Matthew Holm bring us Babymouse’s very first full-color adventure! With signature Babymouse humor, comic book–style panels, and oodles of pink-frosted cupcakes, new readers and devoted fans alike will find plenty to love.
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 26, 2016
      All the hallmarks of the Holm siblings’ Babymouse graphic novels—vivid fantasy sequences, a drily funny narrator, and punchy cartooning—make their way to the irrepressible mouse’s first picture book. After Babymouse scarfs down the cookies meant for a certain jolly old elf, the narrator asks what she hopes Santa will bring her: “A nice tea set, perhaps?” No, Babymouse wants a suit of armor (“Because of all the dragons!” she explains, with more than a hint of scorn), and that means baking special cupcakes for Santa. But can they survive an encounter with a cranky baby brother turned dragon? That’s right, cupcakes and dragons—both featured elements in previous Babymouse books—are big, nontraditional parts of this story, which neatly avoids overfamiliar holiday territory while still highlighting the chaos of the days leading up to Christmas. Ages 3–7. Agent: Jill Grinberg, Jill Grinberg Literary Management.

    • Kirkus

      Babymouse moves from graphic fiction to the full-color picture-book world with a Christmas story about the popular character at an earlier age.Babymouse wants her own suit of armor for Christmas, as well as a baby brother who doesn't cry, unlike the one she already has. After Babymouse eats all the Christmas cookies intended for Santa, she decides to bake him some Christmas cupcakes. While the cupcakes are cooling, her mom leaves the room to tend to the baby. Babymouse hears a scary roaring noise, and she quickly improvises a suit of makeshift armor from kitchen equipment. The action morphs, and readers see Sir Babymouse astride a polka-dot octopus in a battle with hot-pink, fire-breathing Loud Dragon. As the fighting intensifies, Babymouse throws her brother's pacifier at the dragon, flipping it into his mouth and ending the battle. Somehow, during the battle and following celebratory feast, all the cupcakes were eaten...except for one with several bites gone. That sad, half-eaten cupcake is left out for Santa (a white human), who looks at it with a weary, "Oh, Babymouse." The back endpapers show an understanding Santa's gift of a suit of armor for Babymouse left under the tree. Both text and cartoon-style illustrations are filled with witty humor and consideration for an exuberant mouse child's inner emotional world. Little Babymouse will win new fans among younger readers, who will hope to see what dragons Babymouse fights next. (Picture book. 4-7) COPYRIGHT(1) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      October 1, 2016

      K-Gr 2-While the familiar pink, black, and white color scheme makes various appearances on a page, a panel, or even a dragon, the Holm siblings instead choose bold outlines and an expanded palette for this picture book prequel to their popular graphic novels. This Babymouse, dressed in red footie pajamas, may be younger and smaller, but her creativity and mischievousness loom just as large as always. Unable to resist the tasty cookies that were supposed to be left for Santa, Babymouse decides that baking cupcakes will get her back onto his "nice" list, which will hopefully lead to a suit of armor under the tree come Christmas morning. When she is left alone to watch the cupcakes cool while her mother tends to her baby brother, impatience and imagination kick in. Squeak's cries turn into a dragon's roar, and a mighty battle to protect the cupcakes ensues. VERDICT The same buoyant fun of the graphic novel series can be found here, connecting younger children to what is becoming a beloved classic character.-Joanna Fabicon, Los Angeles Public Library

      Copyright 2016 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2017
      In her picture-book debut, Babymouse (here a preschooler), eats Santa's cookies on Christmas Eve. Not wanting to jeopardize her Christmas wish for a suit of armor, Babymouse makes cupcakes for Santa instead. In a wild pink-tinted fantasy, Sir Babymouse defeats a fire-breathing dragon and celebrates with a medieval cupcake banquet. Oops. Animated panel and full-page illustrations (in full color) expand on the text's humor.

      (Copyright 2017 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      November 1, 2016
      It's Christmas Eve, and Babymouse (here a preschooler in cute red sleeper jammies, in her picture book debut) has eaten all of Santa's cookies. Typical. Not wanting to jeopardize her chances of getting a suit of armor on Christmas morning, Babymouse decides to do something different! and makes Christmas cupcakes (with Mom) for Santa instead. This wouldn't be a Babymouse book without a wild, exciting, pink-tinted fantasy; this time Sir Babymouse battles a fire-breathing dragon, is victorious, and celebrates with a medieval cupcake banquet. Oops. The graphic-novel series' offstage narrator is here, too: Well, if you want to earn that armor Animated panel and full-page illustrations (in full color) expand on the text's humor and give little Babymouse and her antics plenty of room to grow. kitty flynn

      (Copyright 2016 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2016
      Babymouse moves from graphic fiction to the full-color picture-book world with a Christmas story about the popular character at an earlier age.Babymouse wants her own suit of armor for Christmas, as well as a baby brother who doesn't cry, unlike the one she already has. After Babymouse eats all the Christmas cookies intended for Santa, she decides to bake him some Christmas cupcakes. While the cupcakes are cooling, her mom leaves the room to tend to the baby. Babymouse hears a scary roaring noise, and she quickly improvises a suit of makeshift armor from kitchen equipment. The action morphs, and readers see Sir Babymouse astride a polka-dot octopus in a battle with hot-pink, fire-breathing Loud Dragon. As the fighting intensifies, Babymouse throws her brother's pacifier at the dragon, flipping it into his mouth and ending the battle. Somehow, during the battle and following celebratory feast, all the cupcakes were eaten...except for one with several bites gone. That sad, half-eaten cupcake is left out for Santa (a white human), who looks at it with a weary, "Oh, Babymouse." The back endpapers show an understanding Santa's gift of a suit of armor for Babymouse left under the tree. Both text and cartoon-style illustrations are filled with witty humor and consideration for an exuberant mouse child's inner emotional world. Little Babymouse will win new fans among younger readers, who will hope to see what dragons Babymouse fights next. (Picture book. 4-7)

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
Kindle restrictions

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:1.7
  • Lexile® Measure:470
  • Interest Level:K-3(LG)
  • Text Difficulty:0-2

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