Gurple and Preen: A Broken Crayon Cosmic Adventure

by Linda Sue Park (Author) Debbie Ridpath Ohi (Illustrator)

Gurple and Preen: A Broken Crayon Cosmic Adventure
Reading Level: 2nd − 3rd Grade

This wildly imaginative, crayon-inspired picture book shows that with a bit of teamwork and a universe of creativity, anything is possible! Buzz! Zap! CRASH! Gurple and Preen are in a big mess! When they crash-land onto an unfamiliar planet with nothing but boxes of crayons, they must work together to get the mission back on course.

From Newbery Award-winning author Linda Sue Park and illustrator Debbie Ridpath Ohi comes a story about all the best things that can come out of a box of crayons.

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Kirkus

Seemingly insurmountable problems are defeated one step at a time...the lively cartoon art, featuring digitally collaged crayons, is consistently bright, colorful, and funny.

ALA/Booklist

A clever nod to imagination and ingenuity.

Publishers Weekly

The spaceship carrying the robots Gurple and Preen, a crayon-drawn human crew in boxed "pods," and a cargo of crayons has crashed on a desolate planet. "How are we ever going to repair the ship?" frets Park's (Nya's Long Walk) pessimistic, purple Gurple: "We need solar-powered batteries, fusion plasma engines, magnetic force fields." Gurple proceeds to snap a series of crayons in half and fume that the drawing each emits (a blue tablecloth, a flock of brown quails) is useless. But Preen, who has a snappy bow propeller atop her bright green domed body, carries away the contents, incorporates or enlists them into a cleverly improvised repair job (in a possible Anne Lamott reference, "Preen rounded up the quails, bird by bird by bird"). When the awakened crew expresses admiration, Breen explains, via the sheepish Gurple's translation, that her method is "the way you do anything hard... Step by step by step." The story begins with more of a lurch than a smooth liftoff, and the hazy initial definition of "pods" may confuse readers, but the protagonists' relationship--reminiscent of C-3PO and R2-D2--gives it ballast. Ohi's (I'm Worried) energetic digital cartooning, which includes elements of crayoning and collage, captures the fun of seeing a robot MacGyver making change, one task at a time. Ages 4-8. (Aug.)

Copyright 2020 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes



Linda Sue Park

LINDA SUE PARK is the author of the Newbery Medal-winning A Single Shard, the best-seller A Long Walk to Water, and the highly-praised novel Prairie Lotus. She has also written several acclaimed picture books and serves on the advisory board of We Need Diverse Books. She lives in western New York with her family. www.lindasuepark.com, Twitter: @LindaSuePark. CHRIS RASCHKA received the Caldecott Medal for The Hello, Goodbye Window and for A Ball for Daisy. He also won a Caldecott Honor for the book Yo! Yes?. He has been hailed by Publishers Weekly as one of the most original illustrators working today, and he continues to create stories and art that appeal to readers of all ages. He lives with his family in New York City. Follow Chris on Instagram @chris.raschka.

Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9781534431416
Lexile Measure
510
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
Publication date
August 25, 2020
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV039060 - Juvenile Fiction | Social Themes | Friendship
JUV051000 - Juvenile Fiction | Imagination & Play
JUV056000 - Juvenile Fiction | Robots
JUV053020 - Juvenile Fiction | Science Fiction | Space Exploration
Library of Congress categories
Robots
Interplanetary voyages
Creative ability

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