Love Monster and the Scary Something (Love Monster #4)

by Rachel Bright (Author)

Reading Level: K − 1st Grade
Series: Love Monster
It's way past bedtime o'clock in Cutesville . . . . but somebody can't sleep. The harder he tries to nod off, the more wide awake Love Monster is, and the later and darker and spookier it gets. When he hears a rustle rustle, then a creeeak, scuffle-shuffle BUMP, he's just sure there's a hungry, scary something on its way to get him. So Love Monster musters up his courage . . . . and discovers that the something scary isn't so scary after all. It's just his friend coming to pay Love Monster a visit. Turns out Love Monster's pal couldn't sleep, either.
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Kirkus Reviews

Yet another outing that will have readers empathizing with and maybe emulating Love Monster.

Publishers Weekly

Fears of lurking monsters can be a source of nighttime anxiety for some kids, so it's slightly ironic that Bright's adorably big-eyed monster, returning in his fourth picture book, is himself being kept awake by strange noises. Bright generates some real suspense during Love Monster's dark night of the soul ("There was definitely something out there! And that something... had definitely gotten in!"), and as her hero's imagination goes into overdrive, readers see a menacing purple fluffball with "terrible, twisterly toenails" tromping up the stairs. Reality proves to be much cuddlier: the intruder, "the tiniest, fluffiest bunny in Cutesville," was simply scared of the dark, too. The storytelling can occasionally get a bit convoluted ("Somehow, hiding from the something outside... got harder than finding something brave inside"), but nervous readers will be reassured by the nothing-to-worry-about conclusion. Ages 2-4. (Aug.)

Copyright 2016 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

School Library Journal

PreS-Gr 2—Popular Love Monster is back for more as he discovers his "brave-inside" by overcoming his fear of the dark. Many children will empathize with Love Monster's plight as he tries to fall asleep and the sounds around him translate into something monstrous. Bright's unique illustrations, created with a technique called solar etching, emphasize the shadows when appropriate, spilling font across the page in a rippling movement that begs to be read aloud. Onomatopoeic words highlight Love Monster's fears, and the clever use of punctuation identifies long, drawn-out pauses. Alliterative phrases like terrible, twisterly toenails trip off the tongue and add to the nimble wordplay. As Love Monster conjures increasingly horrific images from the sounds he hears, Bright presents these imaginings in vivid, bold colors until the hilarious climax. What follows are a series of smaller panels that show how fears can magnify one's reality unless one is willing to face them. VERDICT An endearing first purchase for most collections and a welcome addition to storytimes.—Rachel Zuffa, Racine Public Library, WI

Copyright 2016 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes



Rachel Bright

Rachel Bright is a wordsmith, printmaker, and thinker of happy thoughts. The author-illustrator of several acclaimed picture books, she is passionate about time-honored printmaking techniques. She works from her converted caravan studio, on a farm near the sea in the south of England, where she lives with her partner, a dog called Elvis, and a cat called Superman. lookonthebrightside.co.uk

Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780374346911
Lexile Measure
550
Guided Reading Level
J
Publisher
Farrar, Straus and Giroux (Byr)
Publication date
August 20, 2016
Series
Love Monster
BISAC categories
JUV019000 - Juvenile Fiction | Humorous Stories
JUV039050 - Juvenile Fiction | Social Themes | Emotions & Feelings
Library of Congress categories
Bedtime
Monsters
Fear

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