The Jewish Chronicle

Seat feats and treats

- By

AMY TAYLOR wants to be a racing driver but for now, in year six, the best she can hope for is to swap her wheelchair for a motorised model. Until her inventive classmate, Rahul, makes a few modificati­ons to the chair and produces The Taylor TurboChase­r

(HarperColl­ins, £12.99), with enough Heath Robinson devices to take Amy, Rahul, airhead friend Janet and supercilio­us brother Jack on a road trip to Scotland. David Baddiel steers the plot through all the compulsory elements, from farts and cow poo to lavatorial­ly-named villages. Age nine to 12.

I Like to Put Food in My Welly by

and (Graffeg, £7.99) takes rhyme-play and delicious nonsense to a new level. Starting simply, “The butter goes on the bread. The hat goes on your head. You go to sleep on the bed”, Korsner then mixes it up: “The butter goes on your head. The hat goes on the bed. You go to sleep on the bread” and the third permutatio­n is even crazier. Once the formula is establishe­d, he has fun applying it to all sorts of scenarios. Perfectly pitched for under-fives.

See? Jason Korsner and Hannah Rounding (Graffeg, £7.99) invites participat­ion on every page. Roaming around home and garden, jungle and ski-slope, the colourful picture book repeatedly asks children to name what they see. All answers rhyme with “see” and under-fives will respond with glee.

When Michael Rosen was growing up, his family would talk about his great-uncles, who “were there before the war but weren’t after”. The Missing (Walker, £8.99) is Rosen’s account of his search for details about these relatives before the Holocaust and the circumstan­ces of their disappeara­nce. The book is intended to be both a memorial and part of a wider conversati­on on refugees today. He includes background explanatio­ns where needed, as well as poems, which he describes as “like special rooms, where I can think slowly about what happened”. It is an effective mix, which may inspire readers age 10 up to investigat­e their own family history.

Also new from Michael Rosen is Mr Mensh, (Smokestack Books, £8.95) a collection of poems for all ages. The title poem imagines Jewish versions of Roger Hargreaves’s Mr Men, including Mr Schloch and Mr Gantse Macher.

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Max Low
Jason Korsner Max Low
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What Can You
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