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Sara Cassidy

Author of A Boy Named Queen

21 Works 296 Members 40 Reviews

Series

Works by Sara Cassidy

A Boy Named Queen (2016) 66 copies
Nevers (2019) 29 copies
Kunoichi Bunny (2022) 25 copies
Windfall (2011) 24 copies
Skylark (Orca Soundings) (2014) 22 copies
Slick (2010) 20 copies
Not For Sale (Orca Echoes) (2015) 11 copies
Helen's Birds (2019) 11 copies
The Moon is a Silver Pond (2019) 10 copies
The Sun is a Peach (2020) 6 copies
Flock (2022) 4 copies
Black Gold (2017) 3 copies
Union (2022) 3 copies
I Make Space (2022) 1 copy

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Reviews

This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Quick thoughts: Kind of funny, but a little hard to "get into." Works for upper elementary more than middle school. The characters are cute, but the plot is hard to follow for young students. I just doubt older ones will get interested. It has some cute moments, but just not a favorite for me. I usually love fantasy and historical fiction, but they plot didn't hold my attention.
 
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Tasses | 17 other reviews | Oct 6, 2023 |
First sentence: Hiss! Hiss!

Premise/plot: This is a nearly wordless picture book "in graphic novel form" [says GoodReads]. A little girl and her father are out for a stroll. Along for the ride, of course, is the girl's bunny, Kunoichi. Time and time and time again, the little girl intervenes and saves the day as situations and problems emerge. (For example, she throws the bunny at two fighting, hissing cats on the street. This distracts the cats and the bunny (and the girl) "save" the day.) After each incident, the dad finds the bunny and returns it to the girl. The day is PACKED with action and adventure. The book concludes with them being tucked in at night. (The bunny being newly laundered).

My thoughts: It is nearly wordless. I find it interesting that so many reviews call the girl whiny, bratty, etc. Other than a speech bubble with the bunny's name, the girl says nothing. The father doesn't seem angry or frustrated at having to pick up the bunny again and again and again. Just mildly perplexed. Like HOW does the bunny keep falling out of the stroller? Like how did the bunny end up over here? No indications of annoyance or anger.

I liked this book. I'm not sure I loved it absolutely. But I enjoyed it. I definitely didn't pick up "this kid is a total brat" vibes. If anything, I thought the kid was empathetic. Especially when she noticed the older woman on the bus (or form of transit) was lonely and had the bunny wave at her to bring a smile to her face.
… (more)
 
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blbooks | 3 other reviews | Jul 12, 2023 |
Note: I received a digital review copy of this book from the publisher through NetGalley.
 
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fernandie | 1 other review | Sep 15, 2022 |
Note: I accessed a digital review copy of this book through Edelweiss.
 
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fernandie | 1 other review | Sep 15, 2022 |

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Statistics

Works
21
Members
296
Popularity
#79,168
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
40
ISBNs
92

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