Book Descriptions
for Peanut and Fifi Have a Ball by Randall de Sève and Paul Schmid
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Fifi tries everything to get her little sister Peanut to let her play with her new blue ball. Grabbing it doesn't work. Neither does wheedling, "Pleeeeeaaaase." She gets a wastebasket for basketball. She makes the ball a hat. She pretends to be a fortuneteller in need of a crystal ball. Peanut is interested in none of it, until Fifi returns with a seal named Bob and big plans. "We can teach him tricks and join the circus and travel all over the world!" Peanut is in, just as Fifi decides she'd rather do something else. But all is well by the end of this droll picture book in which the spare palette (muted green, blue, and orange) and spare style of the digitally rendered figures on cream-colored pages have a sensibility both nostalgic and futuristic, in addition to their obvious humor and charm. (Ages 3-6)
CCBC Choices 2014. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2014. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
For every kid who has ever had trouble sharing a special toy.
Peanut has a new ball and her big sister, Fifi, wants to play with it. Peanut doesn't want to share, so Fifi tries to entice her with the many different imaginary games they could play with the ball--they could tell fortunes, or have a bakery, or let a seal balance the ball on its nose! Peanut is NOT convinced, until Fifi comes up with a spectacular imaginary adventure that Peanut can't refuse: a trip to space! But is it too late for her to join the game?
Illustrated in bold graphics and bright colors by an illustrator Maurice Sendak calls "an artist with a superb eye for line and composition," here's a story where the older sibling doesn't always have the upper hand.
Peanut has a new ball and her big sister, Fifi, wants to play with it. Peanut doesn't want to share, so Fifi tries to entice her with the many different imaginary games they could play with the ball--they could tell fortunes, or have a bakery, or let a seal balance the ball on its nose! Peanut is NOT convinced, until Fifi comes up with a spectacular imaginary adventure that Peanut can't refuse: a trip to space! But is it too late for her to join the game?
Illustrated in bold graphics and bright colors by an illustrator Maurice Sendak calls "an artist with a superb eye for line and composition," here's a story where the older sibling doesn't always have the upper hand.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.