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Trick or treat, smell my feet.

De Groat, Diane. (Author).

Summary: Gilbert is excited about the costume, he is planning to wear in the Halloween parade at school, until he discovers that lots of others have the same costume

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780688157661
  • ISBN: 0688157661
  • Publisher: William Morrow, c1998.

Content descriptions

General Note:
gdpl
Subject: Costume -- Juvenile fiction
Halloween -- Juvenile fiction

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 0 of 0 copies available at Sechelt/Gibsons.
  • 0 of 0 copies available at Gibsons Public Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
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  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Monthly Selections - #1 September 1998
    Ages 3^-8. De Groat's Roses Are Pink, Your Feet Really Stink! (1996) is a funny classroom romp about Valentine's Day. The holiday this time is Halloween. Chipmunk Gilbert and his little sister, Lola, prepare their costumes. She's a ballerina, but she wants to be just like him, a space pilot. By mistake he takes the bag with her ballerina costume to school for the parade. He's appalled, but when he discovers that most of his classmates are space pilots, he makes the most of being different, and he twirls triumphantly in his pink tutu to the refreshment table. Of course, then Lulu wants her costume back. De Groat's funny watercolor pictures capture the various animal creatures' very human expressions and body language; and the parade of pig, owl, penguin, duck, rabbit, bear, etc., in outlandish garb captures the dressing-up farce of the holiday. ((Reviewed September 1, 1998)) Copyright 2000 Booklist Reviews
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 1998 October
    Monsters, witches, werewolves - it's hardly any surprise that Halloween can be pretty darn scary for young children. So scary, in fact, that my son's preschool bans costumes and Halloween parties. The right books, however, can gently introduce children to Halloween fun, while reassuring them about their fears. I plan to take several of the following books, which my four-year-old son adores, to his school for classroom reading.

    In Jan L. Waldron's rhyming tale, John Pig's Halloween (Dutton, $14.99, 0525457445, ages 4-8), poor John Pig is too scared to go trick or treating, so he stays home. As he begins carving a pumpkin, a witch and her cat arrive at his doorstep, demanding goodies. They turn up their noses at the licorice and rock candy that John Pig offers, but kindly help him whip up a veritable feast of pumpkin pies, tarts, cookies, sundaes, muffins, mousse, and spiced apple juice. Soon the house is filled with the witch's friends - a vampire, a ghost, a dragon - who gobble up the treats and have a shindig.

    Even fearful John Pig warms up to the crowd: As this ghostly group danced and chowed down his food,/A beaming John Pig was caught up in the mood. Readers will also be caught up in the mood of this charming tale. Illustrator David McPhail manages to make even creepy visitors appear charming.

    Another delightful trick-or-treater is Gilbert, the hero of Diane de Groat's Trick or Treat, Smell My Feet (ages 5-up). Like many of the children in his class, Gilbert plans to wear a popular Captain Zigg costume to the school parade and party. Instead, he grabs the wrong bag and finds himself at school with - horror of all horrors - his sister's ballerina costume! To remedy the situation, he dons the tutu, and, as you can well imagine, hilarious results follow.

    Both the illustrations and story are lively and fun (author/illustrator de Groat even visited a boys' school lavatory to be sure to get the details just right). Meanwhile, the story has an excellent message about the importance of being different instead of copying the crowd.

    Follow four frolicking ghosts in Jacques Duquennoy's The Ghosts in the Cellar (Harcourt Brace, $12, 0152017755, ages 3-8). These very friendly looking ghosts are playing cards in a castle at midnight when they hear a mysterious knocking coming from the cellar. Although terrified, they creep closer and closer to explore, encountering bats, spiders, a mouse, and other frights along the way. The tension is fearsome fun, yet not at all intimidating, perfect for young children.

    And who is knocking? None other than the ghosts' ebullient Aunt Gigi, ready to celebrate her 500th birthday. These ghosts are such fun that I plan to look for their previous adventures, The Ghosts' Trip to Loch Ness and The Ghosts' Dinner.

    A young girl encounters another house of ghouls in The Horrible Spookhouse, by the Swedish team of Kicki Stridh and illustrator Eva Eriksson (Carolrhoda Books, $6.95, 1575053322, ages 4-8). The child is lost in the woods when she comes upon the house, knocks, and asks for food and a place to stay. She's not one bit frightened of the truly horrible looking witches, ghosts, monsters, and spooks who are determined to give her a good scare. The big fun of this tale is not that this girl is brave, but that she simply doesn't seem to notice any danger whatsoever. Kids will not only enjoy, but feel emboldened by her attitude.

    Another title about a frightening house and just right for reading to a group of middle-graders at a Halloween party is The House of Boo by J. Patrick Lewis (Atheneum, $16, 06898036567). A leading children's poet, Lewis uses an unusual rhyme scheme that links the stanzas and holds young readers in its grip with this story of three children out to explore a deserted house one dark night. Older readers may think of Boo Radley in To Kill a Mockingbird and perhaps of Edgar Allan Poe's The Raven. Katya Krenina's illustrations are suggestive and scary, a great debut for this Russian immigrant artist.

    Counting all the Halloween creatures in A Creepy Countdown (Greenwillow, $15, 0688154603) will appeal to young ones in the four-to-six age range. Jos. A. Smith's black-and-white scratchboard illustrations of ghosts, bats, skeletons, witches, and mice fairly dance off the page. Surrounded by a color border, they depict personality and action and set just the right tone for Charlotte Huck's wonderful rhyming verses.

    The big surprise (and scare) in this title come in the middle of the book after readers have reached ten. Then they have the opportunity to see all the scary creatures vanish as they count from ten back to the one scarecrow who "stood all alone."

    Slightly older children will relish the slick wordplay and graphics in Psssst! It's Me . . . the Bogeyman (by Barbara Park, illustrated by Stephen Kroninger, Simon & Schuster, $16, 0689816677, ages 4-9). Who hasn't worried that something, perhaps the Bogeyman, is lurking underneath the bed? In this book he's definitely there, but such a jive-talking dude as to seem more hip than scary.

    He's got the scoop on what it means to do his job, such as the fact that bogeymen don't say "boo." As he explains: "Boo's a baby word, Bubbie./It rhymes with toodle-loo,/And Winnie the Pooh,/And it comes after peek-a-/And right before hoo." This character confesses that he likes chicken fingers, Gummi Bears, and flossing his teeth. In the end, the boy whom he confronts cleverly outwits him, ousting the Bogeyman from his room.

    So here's hoping your family's Halloween is as much fun as that of the bogeyman, a house full of spooks, four frolicking ghosts, Gilbert and his sister Lola, and John Pig. Take heart, too, from the words of Jan Waldron:

    Soon more trick-or-treaters began to stop by.

    They'd seen the lit pumpkin and smelled the warm pie.

    "They're my pals," the witch whispered in John's little ear.

    "They're loud and they're messy, but nothing to fear."

    "Trick or treat!!!" howled the callers. "Bring on the fun!" Copyright 1999 BookPage Reviews

  • Horn Book Guide Reviews : Horn Book Guide Reviews 1999
    The day of the school Halloween parade, Gilbert realizes he's grabbed the bag containing his sister's pink ballerina costume by mistake. De Groat's portrayals of Gilbert (the porcupine from [cf2]Roses Are Pink, Your Feet Really Stink[cf1]) and his classmates are relaxed and uninhibited. Despite the somewhat contrived story, Gilbert's good-natured blunderings make for a kid-appealing Halloween treat. Copyright 1999 Horn Book Guide Reviews
  • Horn Book Magazine Reviews : Horn Book Magazine Reviews 1998 #5
    Nothing could be worse than the fact that nearly everyone in Mrs. Byrd's class has chosen to dress as a Martian Space Pilot-Gilbert's own beloved costume-for the school Halloween parade. Until, that is, it comes time to change and Gilbert discovers that he has grabbed the brown paper bag containing his sister Lola's pink ballerina costume instead of his own. Desperate not to get in trouble for not having a costume (Mrs. Byrd has "already scolded him once today"), Gilbert squeezes into Lola's tutu, pulls the paper bag over his head, and sets out to switch costumes with Lola. But when Gilbert and Lola stumble into Mrs. Byrd's class party before they have had a chance to make the exchange, Gilbert breaks into an impromptu twirl and takes full credit for not having "the same costume as everyone else." De Groat's portrayals of Gilbert (the porcupine who starred in Roses Are Pink, Your Feet Really Stink) and his classmates (a variety of other animals) are relaxed and uninhibited, and her orange and yellow hues evoke the muted brilliance of the season. The magic of Halloween is turned on full force in this neighborhood where kids walk themselves to school and the crossing guard dresses up for the holiday. Even though the story is somewhat contrived (Gilbert does not even begin to look inside his costume sack until all the other boys are dressed and out of the bathroom), Gilbert's good-natured blunderings make for a kid-appealing Halloween treat. marilyn bousquin Copyright 1999 Horn Book Magazine Reviews
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 1999 September #4
    Gilbert and his sister accidentally switch costumes for their school's Halloween parade. "This cross-dressing caper gets primary-grade humor just right," said PW. Ages 5-up. (Aug.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.
  • School Library Journal Reviews : SLJ Reviews 1998 October
    K-Gr 2-Having packed his Martian Space Pilot costume in his bag, Gilbert, the hedgehog introduced in Roses Are Pink, Your Feet Really Stink (Morrow, 1996), trots off to school for a holiday parade and party. Imagine his dismay when he discovers that he has taken his sister Lola's sack and her pink ballerina outfit by mistake. As five of his classmates also decided to be Martian Space Pilots, it's not an unmitigated disaster-so he squeezes into the tutu and toughs it out, encountering surprise but not a trace of derision from his peers. Well, it could happen. De Groat moves her human-proportioned animal cast between a comfortable suburban neighborhood dotted with colorful autumn leaves and a school restroom where the boys change clothes. However skeptical they may be of the mild reaction to Gilbert's costume, young viewers will enjoy the glimpses of loudly colored underwear (plus, for many girls, exotic bathroom plumbing). Despite severely undersized tights, Gilbert isn't made to look all that ludicrous or uncomfortable. Although Lola reclaims her costume for the evening's trick-or-treating, she and her brother at least tinker with gender stereotypes, and that may plant seeds in some readers' minds.-John Peters, New York Public Library Copyright 1998 School Library Journal Reviews

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