
Dad: Today we are taking a look at "The Wonder Book," written by Amy Krouse Rosenthal and illustrated by Paul Schmid. What did you guys think of it?
Lily (age 7): Kids should pick this book up. They would like it.
Gracie (age 9): Any kid would like this. It's hilarious.
Lily: I want everyone to know the hilarious-ness-es of this book.
Isaac (age 11): This is a poem book.
Dad: Did you have a favorite poem in there, Lily?
Lily: I don't know which is my favorite. But the one I remember most is with the boy in the water, and he says: "Tinkle / Tinkle / In the sea / Don't look under / While I pee."
Dad: Ah, so sophisticated...
Isaac: It's funny!
Dad: How about you, Gracie?
Gracie: I like the Various Friends of Mary Mack. You know that rhyme that goes "Miss Mary Mack Mack Mack / All dressed in black black black..." Well, these are the Less Famous Friends of Mary Mack. So there is "Miss Mary Fred Fred Fred / All dressed in red red red..." and stuff like that.
Dad: And many of these poems involve wordplay... Making a pun... Or making a palindrome...
Lily: A whatty-what?
Gracie: A palindrome is a word that is the same spelled both backward and forward.
Dad: And Isaac, tell us about puns.
Isaac: This is an example from the book... If you said, "Puns of the Week," then "Sun" Day would be hot. And "Twos" Day would be a girl and her reflection. And "Fry" Day would be french fry day.
Gracie: (flipping through the book) I like this poem too...
Dad: It's a funny list of names...
Gracie: The illustrator could have drawn anything, but he drew all these kids piled on top of a camel, and the camel is the one named Bob.
Dad: So the poem is funny by itself. And even the picture is funny by itself. But what happens when you put the two together?
Gracie: It explodes into little nuggets of laughing goodness.
Dad: So what did the illustrator bring to the book?
Gracie: Hilariousness.
Isaac: I don't think it would have been as good without the words, and I don't think it would have been as good without the pictures.
Dad: So the book needed both Mrs. Rosenthal and Mr. Schmid.
Gracie: Paul Schmid makes skinny, little, stick ears on his guys. Look at them! Bumpy, stick ears.
Isaac: And they have little, teeny legs and little, teeny arms.
Elijah (age 4): They look like little moosh-kins.
Dad: What is a mooshkin? You mean munchkins?
Elijah: Moosh-kin.
Isaac: The drawings look like they were done really fast. They are really good though. I really like his drawings.
Gracie: Loose doodley black and white.
Dad: Did you have a favorite drawing?
Gracie: At the very beginning of the book where everybody is standing in a line, there is this hilarious bunny. He's freaky! A fat monster bunny! He's got big eyebrows and he's the freakiest bunny in the world. And standing in line there is also a little teeny short dude in a superman costume that we all thought looks like Grandpa!
Isaac: Ha hah!
Dad: Does "The Wonder Book" remind you of any other books we have?
Isaac: Yes! Those other two poem books. "The End of the Sidewalk..."
Gracie: It's called "The Edge of the World."
Dad: Actually, it's "Where the Sidewalk Ends."
Isaac: And the other one is called something like "I Have a House on My Head."
Dad: Ha ha -- "A Light in the Attic." Those are both by Shel Silverstein.
Gracie: Those books have a whole bunch of poems in them too. And look at these pictures! They are very much the same style as the pictures in the Freaky-guy books.
Dad: Freaky-guy? You mean Shel Silverstein?
Gracie: (running to get the Silverstein books) There are really freaky photographs of him on the backs of the books. This one has a picture of his foot. And this one... is... Eeeeea! They are all freaky, freaky pictures of him, his face, and his feet.
Dad: So should they have taken a really scary, horrifying picture of Amy Krouse Rosenthal for the back of The Wonder Book?
Isaac: Ha hah ha... No... Ha ha...
Dad: (turning to the jacket flap/author bio in The Wonder Book) See, this is what she looks like in real life...
Gracie: Oh, she's cute!
Dad: What about this picture of Paul Schmidt?
Gracie: He's... not as cute...
Isaac: Ha ha!
Gracie: Um.
Lily: He's got cool hair.
Gracie: Yeah! He's got REALLY cool hair!

All dressed in green green green
Had the cutest kitten kitten kitten
You've ever seen seen seen
- poem and picture by Lily
And some "Month Puns" by Isaac:
Author: Amy Krouse Rosenthal
Illustrator: Paul Schmid
Published, 2010: Harper Collins
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