Cat Kid Comic Club Collaborations by Dav Pilkey (Graphix: an imprint of Scholastic Inc.) HB RRP $13.99 ISBN 9781338846621
Reviewed
by Kerry Gittins
This fourth installment
in the Cat Kid Comic Club series from Dav Pilkey is another triumph, not only
because of its trademark graphic format, but for the inspiration within for
young writers and illustrators. Join Li'l Petey, Molly, Flippy and the baby
frogs, as they share their successes and failures in story creation with the
world. They also provide an insight into the process of writing, with each
chapter using either a slightly different graphic format and/or a different
writing technique. In Wendy and Raine’s chapter about their dad’s life story,
they use a traditional comic format in the illustrations, but have incorporated
A LOT of exaggeration in the actual story. Gilbert and Curly learn about
copyright and parody in their creation of Frogzilla. Summer and Starla use
photography and the art of Haiku for their story.
There are chapters highlighting storyboarding,
recycling toys to create completely different characters, using real life
sequential images instead of illustrations, 3-D modelling, being an agent, getting
published, and all the while learning to be respectful, resilient, creative,
and collaborative. My favourite chapter is Billie and Corky’s story Run
Little Baby, Run!!! because it incorporates mondegreens – the
misinterpretation or mishearing of phrases to create totally new meanings – and
an order of two large French fries and a supa-sized shake becomes two
large French flies and a supa-sized snake with hilarious
consequences.
The thing I love about the Cat Kid stories is
that readers won’t even know they are absorbing and learning all these creative
insights because of the very clever and thoughtful way Dav Pilkey writes and
presents the books. Bright, colourful, humorous illustrations with large,
colourful fonts, and funny, engaging stories that are quick and easy to read,
will capture the children’s imaginations. And the graphic novel format
has been such a drawcard for reluctant readers. Many children who found chapter
books a struggle are now avid readers, thanks to authors and illustrators like
Dav Pilkey who make reading accessible, appealing and most of all - fun!
Supporting
teaching themes include family, persistence, resilience, collaboration,
respect, copyright, graphic novels, photography, recycling, storyboarding,
story writing and publishing. Recommended for ages 7 – 10 years.
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