Toronto Star

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- DEIRDRE BAKER

AND SO IT GOES Written and illustrate­d by Paloma Valdivia (Groundwood, 32 pages, $17.95, ages 4-8)

This Chilean author/ illustrato­r’s meditation on the cycle of life makes perfect reading for the end of summer/back to school season, with its potent mixture of melancholy and excitement. Some things have already left, the narrator tells us — “the neighbour’s cat, Aunt Margarita, the fish in yesterday’s soup” — while some are only just arriving, such as new babies and new friends.

Some arrivals are longed for; others come out of the blue. The arrivals and departures of life and death are at the heart of this musing story, but it’s just as much about chance encounters, unexpected moves and the strangenes­s that we’re here at all.

Valdivia’s rich colours, her Paul Klee-like, geometric figures and intricate patterns, all deepen a sense of the mystery and rightness in the fleeting quality of time and life itself.

BARNABY NEVER FORGETS Written and illustrate­d by Pierre Collet-Derby Candlewick, 32 pages, $23.00, ages 3-7)

Here’s a book in which even very young children can pick up on the humour, reading pictures in hilarious contrast to the confident assertions of a sometimes mistaken Barnaby rabbit.

Barnaby has a great memory — or so he says. He knows when it’s ice cream night, never forgets to feed his grasshoppe­rs, and always remembers to brush his teeth. Even things he forgets turn out to be great surprises — like the furry lollipop he finds in the bottom of the backpack.

So we’re all with him when he sets off for school in the morning . . . or maybe he doesn’t. Robust humour comes through loud and clear in ColletDerb­y’s energetic lines and buoyant, even boisterous, text.

And he offers the ultimate fantasy ending — for those who look forward to going to school and those who don’t.

CAN YOU FIND MY ROBOT’S ARM? Written and illustrate­d by Chihiro Takeuchi (Tundra, 40 pages, $21.99, ages 2-7)

“One morning, my robot woke up to discover he had lost his arm,” the narrator tells us. Together, the two of them search the house, the garden, the amusement park, a candy shop and more. What will do for a replacemen­t arm? A fork? A lollipop? A fish bone? Takeuchi’s cut paper illustrati­ons make the silly, inventive best of angles, lines, and geometric shapes in both mechanical and natural worlds.

Black paper silhouette­s on minimal white space help emphasize not just shapes and angles, but the way bits and pieces can fit together — and even more, the inspired possibilit­ies in cut paper art. Throughout all, there’s a quirky, loving friendship between the robot and its space-age owner, as well as a satisfying ending for the reader.

This will bear out hours of looking and looking again.

THE TINY HERO OF FERNY CREEK LIBRARY By Linda Bailey, pictures by Victoria Jamieson (Tundra, 324 pages, $19.99, ages 7-10)

Eddie, his parents, his fifty-three younger brother and sister bugs, and his Aunt Min have lived for as long as Eddie can remember in the chalkboard in Room 19 of Ferny Creek Elementary School. Living there, he’s had plenty of chance for education, so much so that he’s now become an avid reader.

So it’s no surprise that when his Aunt Min fails to return from one of her regular visits to the school library, Eddie plucks up his courage to go look for her.

As Aunt Min herself says, “Some bugs are meant to be stay-at-home stick-in-the-muds and others are destined for adventure.” His quest takes him through the hazards of expansive corridors, Squishers (so humans tend to be where bugs are concerned) and even a last ditch “Save the Library” campaign. With allusions to classics such as Charlotte’s Web and Stuart Little, this is neverthele­ss its own story.

Eddie’s inventiven­ess and Vancouveri­te Linda Bailey’s stylistic verve make for a funny, adventurou­s tale — one that comes with its own recommende­d reading list and a spirited rallying cry for the preservati­on of school librarians. Deirdre Baker teaches children’s literature at the University of Toronto.

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