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Dibs!
Hardback
Main Details
Title |
Dibs!
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Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Laura Gehl
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Illustrated by Marcin Piwowarski
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Physical Properties |
Format:Hardback | Pages:32 | Dimensions(mm): Height 249,Width 249 |
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ISBN/Barcode |
9781512465327
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Audience | |
Illustrations |
Illustrations, color
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Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Lerner Publishing Group
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Imprint |
Carolrhoda
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Publication Date |
7 May 2019 |
Publication Country |
United States
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Description
Teaching your little brother his first word--dibs--is funny. Until he starts calling dibs on everything, from your parents' bed to a real airplane to the White House. What's next? Calling dibs on the moon? Sure enough, Julian's little brother, Clancy, calls dibs on NASA and blasts off into space! Julian is glad to have Earth all to himself...at first. But Julian begins to miss Clancy. Can he harness the power of dibs to rescue his little brother? This humorous take on sibling rivalry is by Laura Gehl, author of the hilarious picture book I Got a Chicken for My Birthday.
Author Biography
Laura Gehl is the award-winning author of more than three dozen picture books, board books, and early readers including Who Is a Scientist?, I Got a Chicken for My Birthday, Dibs!, and Climate Warriors: Fourteen Scientists and Fourteen Ways to Save our Planet. A former science teacher with a PhD in neuroscience, Laura lives in Chevy Chase, Maryland, with her husband and four children. Marcin Piwowarski is a self-taught artist in traditional and digital illustration and has created illustrations for hundreds of books during his twenty-year artistic journey. His artwork is inspired by nature, daily life, and music, mixing magical and mysterious ambience with down-to-earth elements of everyday reality. Marcin lives in Portugal with his three children.
ReviewsBig brother Julian's habit of calling 'Dibs!' comes home to roost when little brother, Clancy, picks up the word--his very first--and gets everything he points to. Clancy calls dibs on everything from the parental bed to a whole bakery, a real airplane, the White House ('You can't call dibs on the White House! You need to be elected!'), and, finally, a rocket ship. With Clancy in space, Julian enjoys having toys, cookies, and parents to himself again, but eventually worries, 'dibs' a rocket of his own, and catches up in time to rescue Clancy from aliens. Back on Earth, after hugs and cookies, Julian has another useful word: 'Jinx.' Piwowarski depicts Julian and his family as Asian in the cartoon illustrations, and gives the onesie-clad Clancy a steady self assurance that stands in comical contrast to his older brother's exaggerated astonishment and dismay. In a refreshing change of pace from most episodes about the evils of selfishness, the theme of 'learning to share' plays second fiddle to the brotherly bonding at the end.--Booklist -- "Website" (5/3/2019 12:00:00 AM) Two brothers call dibs, starting a war that escalates to epic proportions. In Gehl's simple narration, older brother Julian always calls dibs on everything. Dibs on the plate with the planets on it and on the star-shaped cookies, while his baby brother, Clancy, observes. It is no surprise that Clancy's first word is 'Dibs!' However, Clancy has upped the ante. Instead of calling dibs on mere toys and treats, he goes for their parents' bed. Mom and Dad relent: 'Well, he did call dibs.' Clancy continues, calling dibs on the entire bakery (and stuffing his face), on an airplane, and even on the White House. All of the adults cede to Clancy, even the Secret Service: 'Well, he did call dibs.' Julian attempts to explain the rules of dibs and democracy, insisting that 'you can't call dibs on the White House! You need to be elected'--but to no avail. It is not until Clancy calls dibs on NASA and blasts into space on a rocket that Julian reflects on his relationship with his sibling. Gehl provides a steady pace of increasing suspense and silliness, capping Clancy's demands with a cosmic climax and ending with a punchline. Piwowarski provides realistic characters with bright blended colors and blurred borders that capture the mischievous spirit of the story. Julian, Clancy, and their parents all appear to be Asian. Adults, beware of the dibs wars this title will initiate. Young readers will definitely call dibs on this one.--Kirkus Reviews -- "Journal" (2/12/2019 12:00:00 AM)
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