“The biggest mistake Pokko’s parents ever made was giving her a drum,” begins this story about a young frog musician’s path to creative fulfillment, benevolent (mostly) leadership, and satisfying self-expression.
Pokko and the Drum
by Matthew Forsythe; illus. by the author
Preschool, Primary Wiseman/Simon 64 pp.
10/19 978-1-4814-8039-0 $17.99
e-book ed. 978-1-4814-8040-6 $10.99
“The biggest mistake Pokko’s parents ever made was giving her a drum,” begins this story about a young frog musician’s path to creative fulfillment, benevolent (mostly) leadership, and satisfying self-expression. After that attention-grabbing opening line, the well-paced text builds anticipatory humor by backing up to describe earlier gifts Pokko’s parents regretted: a slingshot, a llama, and a balloon, all shown in uncluttered spreads featuring the game but poker-faced Pokko. Then comes the drum: Pokko’s face lights up (for a second) and she reaches toward her instrument, her now-constant companion. She practices inside the house; her parents send her out. She goes to the forest, where her playing attracts a banjo-strumming raccoon, a trumpet-blowing rabbit, and more; soon she’s trailed by a parade of like-minded, music-making creatures (minus the rabbit, who gets eaten by a wolf: “No more eating band members or you’re out of the band,” deadpans Pokko). There are lots of visual nods and references in Forsythe’s textured, painterly watercolor, gouache, and colored-pencil illustrations — Rousseau, Sendak, Lobel, Ungerer, Keats, Klassen — but, like his amphibian protagonist, this idiosyncratic author/illustrator/animator (The Brilliant Deep, rev. 7/18; Warning: Do Not Open This Book!; the Adventure Time television series) marches to his own beat.
From the January/February 2020 Horn Book Magazine.
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