Review of King Baby

beaton_king-babyKing Baby
by Kate Beaton; illus. by the author
Preschool    Levine/Scholastic    40 pp.
10/16    978-0-545-63754-1    $17.99    g

Heavy is the head that wears the crown, but this ruler can’t yet support his own neck. A king (really a newborn baby) greets his loyal subjects (really relatives and friends of the family): “I am King Baby!…I will give you many blessings, for King Baby is generous.” The hand-drawn and digitally completed illustrations show that he’s adorable and sweet and cuddly, egg-shaped with little rosy cheeks, a benevolent-looking ruler. All smiles, he poses for photos and entertains his people. However, and this comes as no surprise, “your king also has many demands!” Like any newborn, King Baby is high-maintenance, unpredictable, and frequently frustrated by his parents’ lack of understanding: “Bring me the thing…Not this thing!…Bring me the other thing!” His frustration motivates him to learn to crawl, then to walk. King Baby, having outgrown his moniker, worries about who will watch over his subjects…but the arrival of Queen Baby ensures the line of succession. The spare, humorous text is mostly from autocratic King Baby’s point of view (Mom and Dad get in a couple of lines of speech-bubble dialogue). Unlike King Baby himself, Beaton’s illustrations are unfussy (ha!), with lots of white space; the spread in which he learns to crawl (first falling on his face) is slapstick for toddlers. “It’s good to be the king,” Mel Brooks famously said in History of the World, Part I, and King Baby thinks so, too.

From the September/October 2016 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.

Elissa Gershowitz

Elissa Gershowitz is editor in chief of The Horn Book, Inc. She holds an MA from the Center for the Study of Children's Literature at Simmons University and a BA from Oberlin College.

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Rebecca Taylor

Thanks for the quick review :) Looking forward to reading the book to my son :)

Posted : Nov 04, 2016 06:35


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