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THE GREAT ZOMBIE PUMPKIN PARADE!
By Robert Burleigh, Illustrated by Wendell Minor
Christy Ottaviano Books/Little, Brown & Co.
August 1, 2023
From THE HORN BOOK
In propulsive rhyming verse and spooky watercolor and gouache illustrations ("mixed with digital"), readers are introduced to the participants in a parade of zombies with jack-o'-lanterns for heads-Slime-Faces Sumpkin, Ghoul-Eyed Gumpkins, Crush-Headed Cumpkins, etc.-who march through the countryside on Halloween night. They return to the pumpkin graveyard at dawn, but "watch out, my friend, / beware, be wise! / This isn't the end-- / the zombies will rise." Burleigh and Minor's latest collaboration (Breaking Waves and Wilbur Wright Meets Lady-Liberty, both rev. 5/21) is perfect for young readers who enjoy a bit of "shiver and quiver" in their picture books.
From SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL
Just scary enough to please those looking for a mild fright, this story leads young readers on an annual Halloween romp of pumpkin-headed zombies. "Welcome to the Great Zombie Pumpkin Parade!" Burleigh brings out the silly side of the undead with rhymes: "Leaves swirl and tumble/ as day turns to night./ Zombies stumble/Left and right," and alliteration: watch out for "Zipper-Toothed Zlumpkin," who is preceded by "Drizzle-Mouthed Dumpkin" and followed by "Slime-Faced Sumpkin." Minor's watercolor and gouache illustrations, which feature an emojilike range of zombie expressions, soften the spooky couplets. VERDICT A natural fit for Halloween-themed read alouds and activities.
From PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"Fear and fright!/ Brag and boast!/ On Halloween night/ who's got the most?" Following a spread showing a sun-kissed pumpkin patch at dusk, this Halloween extravaganza from collaborators Burleigh and Minor presents a parade of comically ugly, jack-o'-lantern-headed zombies lumbering across its pages. Rhyming lines introduce the figures: "First in line is/ Drizzle-Mouthed Drumpkin," who drools and carries a pitchfork; "Right behind is/ Zipper-Toothed Zumpkin," whose carved face sports one closed eye and a saw-toothed jaw. The humanoid beings, portrayed with tan hands, are clothed in ragged, alternatingly gray and black clothing that occasionally bears rust-hued traces. Marching across the handsome autumn countryside, the text asks readers to weigh in: "Who's the scariest?/ Creep and crawl!/ Who's the strangest/ of them all?" Though language warns readers to "beware, be wise!" the procession reads as more inviting accounting than genuine threat, especially as the parade winds down into a graveyard snooze.
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