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The dust bunnies are back for another round of rhyming fun. But this time a big MEAN dust bunny wants to play—and run and chase and grab!
Can the four little dust bunnies get that bully to play nice? Jan Thomas’s lovable critters shine again in this hilarious rhyme-filled book that starts with scares and ends with…smiles.
Expressive faces steal the show as the characters’ thick eyebrows, protruding noses and untamed fur react to each hilarious circumstance, demonstrating that a little dust is well worth the mess.
PreS-Gr 2Even though they ended up inside a vacuum cleaner in "Rhyming Dust Bunnies" (S & S, 2009), the brightly colored creatures are back, this time getting bullied by a big, gray, self-proclaimed mean dust bunny. He turns their rhyming games into an ordeal by sitting on them and chasing them around until the large cat from Thomas's "What Will Fat Cat Sit On?" (Harcourt, 2007) sits on the meanie and smashes him flat. The bunnies pull and tug until the big guy is back to regular size. They call him a thug and he responds with a hug, showing his change of heart. The digital illustrations in flat hues are outlined in thick black lines. The style and colors are the same as in the author's previous works. The pages are clean and crisp. The text is part of the action. Some words are big, some are small, some black, some red, but always inside a white word bubble. This is simplicity at its best, a tale of bullying told with humor by some familiar friends. It is sure to be a favorite of the picture-book crowd."Ieva Bates, Ann Arbor District Library, MI" Copyright 2009 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
In this follow-up to "Rhyming Dust Bunnies", the effervescent dust bunnies interact with the aptly named title character, who's gray, sharp-toothed, and very grumpy. When they invite him to rhyme a word with fit, he volunteers sit and flattens them. Next, the meanie takes a turn, demanding, What rhymes with face? (the apprehensive bunnies learn he has chase in mind). All is finally set right with a hug, and readers should find the dust bunnies as magnetic as ever. Ages 35. "(Nov.)" Copyright 2009 Publishers Weekly Used with permission.