by Carlie Sorosiak (Author) Manu Montoya (Illustrator)
How can Leopold, goat and bookstore owner, find the perfect book for a fellow goat--one the visitor will enjoy reading, not munching?
Leopold the goat owns a delightful bookstore, and he has a talent for matching his customers with the ideal book--an adventure story for the girl in the rain boots, a novel about gnomes for the man who loves to laugh, and a book of birds for the woman in the feathered hat. But one day, another goat arrives and proceeds to eat every book Leopold offers. Can Leopold find just the right one to tempt this reluctant reader? This funny, charming tale of the transformative power of books is a celebration of that first special story that sparks a child's love of reading.
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Quaint but doesn’t leave you wanting seconds.
A caprine bookseller communicates literature's creative and conceptual value to a book-hungry shopper in this playful tale for bibliophiles. Leopold, a bespectacled white billy goat, loves cozy sweaters and the written word. He's also fond of making selections for customers--"each fit its reader snugly and warmly, like a sweater." His curatorial instincts falter, however, when another buck wanders into the shop in search of titles to chomp. "This is going on your bill," says Leopold, pictured waving a half-eaten tome through the shop window. A suggestion inspired by Leopold's own book-munching days turns things around, and concluding vignettes show the hungry patron metaphorically "filling up" on stories. Employing gouache and digital techniques, Montoya uses earthy tones to craft warm scenes of various creatures browsing the shelves. Ages 4-8. (Sept.)
Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.PreS-Gr 2--Leopold is a goat who loves cozy sweaters and books. Even more than reading books himself, he loves picking out books for others to read; it is "like introducing someone to a friend." When a new customer in his bookstore proves challenging, Leopold sets out to find "the perfect book--for reading. Not for eating." His wife reminds him of his own transition from eating books to reading them, and the memory is the key to helping his new customer find "stories [that] fill me up." The text and illustrations both have a lovely balance of coziness and humor; Leopold's deep and genuine love for books and reading, and the comfort he gets from entering others' stories and living in their worlds, will resonate with readers of all ages. Charming touches, such as a little white mouse who appears on several pages, and endpapers that show books with bites taken out of them, show care and attention to detail. VERDICT This book could turn anyone into a reader! A first purchase that would pair well with Oliver Jeffers's The Incredible Book Eating Boy.--Jenny Arch
Copyright 2022 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.