Author Archives: Matthew M

Kirkus Reviews

Kirkus Reviews: Absolutely Not

Watercolor, pencil, and digital techniques illustrate this gentle story about the nature of fear during two insects’ late-summer stroll. Gloria proposes an outing, but Frieda is frightened of the snake outside the window-which is really the winding river in the distance. Gloria coaxes Frieda outside, where Frieda sees huge frogs waiting to eat them-but they’re really only the negative space of leaf patterns on the ground. Some pictures show the two insects from afar, emphasizing how small they are within their landscape; endpapers provide an aerial view of the territory covered. Pale greens and blues keep the setting mild and summer-like. Deft visual pacing brings sudden drama when one of Frieda’s worries turns out to be well-founded, but never fear: this whimsical tale may ponder the relative value of fear itself, but McElligott brings everyone home safe. (Picture book. 3-6)

School Library Journal

School Library Journal: Absolutely Not

This unpretentious story about friendship has a twist borrowed from “The Blind Man and the Elephant” that separates it from the pack. Dressed up in elegant outfits, in complementary shades of lavender and periwinkle, two green bugs share a companionable walk. Gloria is eager to participate fully in the beautiful day; Frieda is timid and imagines danger everywhere. What Frieda sees as a snake, Gloria recognizes as a river. Gloria’s lovely log looks to Frieda like a dog. After having an enjoyable time in spite of herself, Frieda reluctantly agrees to take Gloria’s shortcut home through the woods (“Have I been wrong so far?”) and indeed Frieda’s fears are realized. The friends narrowly escape, but make plans for another walk the next day. McElligott’s simple and attractive layout; the clean, orderly pencil-and-watercolor illustrations; and the straightforward text with its predictable aspects all work together to keep readers inside the joke. Absolutely Not offers young readers a rare chance to synthesize verbal and graphic clues and figure out for themselves what’s what. It all adds up to a dash of emerging literacy and a splash of fun.

Washington Post

The Washington Post: Absolutely Not

This gently witty tale stars two bugs—Gloria, who looks like a grasshopper and her friend Frieda, who might well be an ant. Like Russell Hoban’s Frances books, it is composed mostly of repartee, since, like Frances and her sister (also a Gloria), the heroines are constantly at odds. “Look around you,” says Gloria, the impulsive one. “Isn’t this a perfect morning?” “Absolutely not,” says wary Frieda. “It’s frightening.” And so it goes throughout the walk Gloria persuades Frieda to join her on, with the pictures slyly commenting on their exchanges (is that a log or a dog? a giant or a bicycle?) until both are proved right in a clever and very satisfying ending.

Library Media Connection

Library Media Connection: Absolutely Not

Beautiful, big-eyed bugs by the name of Frieda and Gloria are the main characters of this enchanting story. Can you imagine a bug that is a worrywart? Frieda worries about everything! She even imagines things are scary when they are not.

Frieda’s good friend, Gloria, takes her out for a morning stroll where she must face several unfounded fears. But, in the end,
it is Frieda’s worry that saves them from being bird dinner! That’s when Gloria appreciates Frieda’s cautiousness, yet Frieda still trusts Gloria’s ideas. Using simple yet powerful language, the reader is instantly wrapped into the story as well as into the delightful bug characters.

McElligott’s realistic and artistic illustrations add to the interest of the story by allowing the reader to “see” what Frieda sees. Teachers, librarians, guidance counselors, and parents will enjoy reading this story to children ages 5-8. Be sure to pre-read this book so you are ready for the surprise bird that tries to get Frieda and Gloria. Highly Recommended.

The Flint Journal: Absolutely Not

In Matthew McElligott’s “Absolutely Not” ($16.95, Walker) grasshopper friends Gloria and Frieda go for a walk one day in late summer. Gloria is the brave one; Frieda is a bundle of nerves.

Along the way, Frieda sees all sorts of suspicious and frightening things in the mundane. To this nervous bug, a winding river looks like a snake, a rotten log resembles a ferocious dog, even the pattern in leaves looks like hungry frogs.

Gloria has to calm her fretful friend at every turn, but then Frieda’s vivid imagination proves handy when the two trees she thinks resemble the legs of a bird turn out to be the real thing.

McElligott’s story is engaging and his renderings of these two “lady bugs” absolutely adorable. Recommended for ages 3-8.

San Diego Union Tribune: Absolutely Not

Gloria and Frieda, two insect friends, live in a small house on Bug Hill, near Snake River, Big Nose Tree and Sleepy Lake. Gloria is tall, svelte and adventurous in her chic hat and beads, but Frieda is something else. She’s short, stout and terrified.

One gorgeous day, Gloria suggests a nice walk through their sylvan surroundings. “Absolutely not,” Frieda insists. To her, the river is a snake, the clouds are hairy, scary, monster eyebrows and the log is actually a scowling dog. On each step of the walk, Frieda envisions terror reigning from forest floor to canopy.

Gloria pooh-poohs it all. “It’s just your imagination. You find something bad in everything you see.”

The joke is we can see through Frieda’s eyes. McElligott’s punning illustrations let us see the monster eyebrows, the scowling dog, the snake in the river. As the walk goes on, Frieda is almost convinced by Gloria’s bravado – until two tree trunks with what look like clawed feet turn out to be something altogether different. (Leigh Fenly, San Diego Union Tribune, May 16, 2004)

Kirkus Reviews

Kirkus Reviews: Backbeard and the Birthday Suit

Kirkus Reviews: “Backbeard the buccaneer gets a wardrobe upgrade in this waaay south of serious outing. So hairy and unsanitary that even his parrots quit in disgust, the pirate chief at last decides to exchange his filthy rags for something classier, and maybe pick up a new mascot too. Fortunately (for readers, if not for him), he finds a tailor both quick-witted and poker-faced, and soon Backbeard is strutting down the street past stunned townsfolk in a sporty boater and flashy psychedelic duds, balancing a piglet on his shoulder. His own crewmembers don’t recognize him-‘You sound like the Captain, but you look like a goofball’-until a friendly melee sets them straight. Properly capped with a back cover of equally hilarious alternative outfits and a squat, glowering, hirsute paper doll, this makes the funniest makeover since Laura Rader’s Santa’s New Suit (2000).” –Kirkus Reviews

Booklist

Booklist: Backbeard and the Birthday Suit

Booklist: Backbeard is the hairiest, toughest pirate ever, but following a particularly rowdy birthday party, even he admits that he’s a mess and it’s that time for new duds. The clothing store doesn’t have pirate gear, but it does have a straw boater, colorfully patterned trousers, a coat, and a pig––not the look Backbeard expected though one that brings both surprises and delights. Pirate fans will enjoy this witty tale about a coarse pirate who discovers his inner fashionista; it juxtaposes traditional pirate characters  (Sweaty McGhee, Mad Garlic Jack, etc.) and dialogue (“Drivelswigger!”) with a glimpse at a scallawag’s softer side (“Do your worst, you barnacled scalawags! . . . But wrinkle my suit and you’ll swab the deck for a year!”). McElligott’s mixed-media art is a joy, incorporating pattern, texture, and detailed, cartoonlike characters with scanned photographic images and sepia-toned borders that add depth and vintage flavor to a cheerful package.

January Magazine: Backbeard and the Birthday Suit

A good children’s picture book is like beauty: it’s success is often in the eye of the beholder. With so many lovely books for young children rolling off the presses all the time, it’s tough to choose just one or two. One thing is clear: in a market that gets increasingly tougher, the very best of the bunch tend to be excellent all around, possessing all of the elements that make a book good, no matter who is beholding it.

Matthew McElligott’s latest is a terrific example. Backbeard and the Birthday Suit really does have it all. First of all — and to my mind, this is tremendously important in a children’s book — the illustrations are simply brilliant. McElligott’s style here is strong and assured. More: his technique is interesting, well thought out and executed. It appears that McElligott has combined traditional illustration techniques with photo-based backgrounds and textures. A lot of illustrators could not have pulled this off — at least certainly not so well — but McElligott manages it beautifully.”

Second — and no less important — the story here really works. Better still: it works on several levels. We meet Backbeard, “the hairiest pirate ever. Backbeard was so hairy, it was sometimes tough to tell if there was a pirate underneath.”

Not only is Backbeard hairy, he’s stinky, loud and just generally not that pleasant to be around. I mean, he’s so hairy, stinky and loud that even his parrots generally quit after just a few days. Waking up after a particularly exuberant birthday party, Backbeard decides enough is enough and leaves the comfort of his pirate ship in order to go shopping in town.

At a fashionable shop, he ends up in a very unpiratey suit, complete with boater hat, monocle and a pig for a mascot instead of a parrot. When he gets back to his ship, he is so unrecognizable to his crew that they attack him. Finally, after much kerfuffle, they realize their mistake and accept him as their captain.

Except, of course, with McElligott’s snappy prose and wonderful illustrations, the journey is a lot more fun. There’s even a mild yet meaningful positive message or two: 1. Clothes don’t make the man (or child or pirate, for that matter) and 2. Your friends (or your crew) will like you no matter what you wear, the important thing is to pick things that you feel good in.

There’s still more to like in Backbeard and the Birthday Suit. The typography here is clear and easy to read, which is important in a book meant to be read aloud. The book itself is beautifully designed and even text-only pages that would usually not sport an illustration feature delicately wrought sepia toned copy warmers by the author.

The result of all of this care and talent is a book that just snaps: it’s flawless and fun and highly recommended for young readers and pre-readers.

McElligott is also the author of Absolutely Not and The Spooky Book as well as several others. | April 2006

 

Monica Stark is a freelance writer and editor.

Press Register: Backbeard and the Birthday Suit

Press Register: Backbeard, “the hairiest pirate who ever lived,” must retire his torn and tattered suit. He falls prey to a sales clerk’s idea of what constitutes a fashionable pirate ensemble. Backbeard’s crew, who at first don’t recognize him, assure him that clothes don’t make the pirate, as they take in his new look of a straw boater, boldly printed pink jacket and green-striped pants. A bit garish and ridiculous for the high seas, but Backbeard challenges anyone to say such.

McElligott proves masterful with his lyrical pirate lingo, quite silly and musical. He also takes pirate stereotypes and twists them to the point of ludicrous characterizations, such as a pig that rides on Backbeard’s shoulder instead of a parrot. The young readers at my house guffawed loudly from start to finish. Ages 5-9. –Monica Anderson Young, Mobile Press-Register

Columbia Tribune: Backbeard and the Birthday Suit

Shiver me timbers, it’s pirate time again!

Columbia Tribune: Ahoy, mates! Looking for a good pirate adventure? With “Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End” coming out this week, what better way to really get into the mood than to read about pirates?

“Backbeard and the Birthday Suit: The Hairiest Pirate Who Ever Lived,” written and illustrated by Matthew McElligott, makes the average mean old pirate look especially crusty. That’s because Backbeard, who is drawn with hair everywhere, is so ugly and smelly that you can almost sense the stink from the book’s pages. It is his birthday, and as his crew yells rude remarks about his appearance, he suddenly takes heed and heads off his ship to a clothing shop to find something that doesn’t have holes or smell. He’s also looking for a parrot that won’t leave him because he smells. The shopkeeper assures him that he has just the right clothing for him.

How he is dressed, and the animal a shopkeeper places on Backbeard’s shoulder, will surely have your youngster smiling all the way to the end!

By HOLLY E. NEWTON, Columbia Daily Tribune
Published Thursday, May 24, 2007

Curled Up With a Good Kid’s Book: Backbeard and the Birthday Suit

Backbeard is the hairiest pirate who ever lived. He’s also the most unsanitary, which makes it hard for him to keep a parrot. When the crew of the Five O’Clock Shadow throws Captain Backbeard a birthday party (which, incidentally, is an unmistakably great success because the crew members scratch, spit and hit each other with bottles before being tossed overboard by their captain), Backbeard reviews his wardrobe and decides it’s time for a change. Enter the birthday suit.

No, it’s not that kind of suit. This is a children’s book—even if it’s a hugely entertaining read for adults as well.

Backbeard goes ashore and visits a tailor with an appalling lack of proper pirate clothing in stock. The intrepid tailor convinces Backbeard to change his look and to adopt a new shoulder-riding mascot. When the pirate captain returns to his ship, his crew ridicules him, tries to drive him off the ship, and in general gives him a hard time. The pirate Backbeard isn’t feared across the seas for nothing, and he holds his own. Finally, someone throws an egg at Backbeard’s hat, a true sign of affection aboard the Five O’Clock Shadow: “I love you guys,” says Backbeard.

Backbeard and the Birthday Suit is one of those delightful children’s books that does what literature was meant to do once upon a time: It instructs as it entertains. In this case, children get a little lesson in standing up for their own ideas, be they on personal fashion style, on choice of friends (or mascots), on how to run a pirate ship, or on how to be the best (and hairiest) pirate that ever sailed the Seven Seas. Author/illustrator Matthew McElligott, who describes himself as (like Backbeard), “big, messy, smelly, and not too bright,” has created a delightful hero and crew—Mad Jack Garlic, Sweaty McGhee, Scarlet Doubloon and the rest. A follow-up volume, Backbeard: Pirate for Hire (2007)—is equally charming and clever. The illustrations are filled with little details to be discovered on first, second and subsequent readings, and the pirates are silly enough to offset any scary features. In fact, the scariest thing about these two books may be how many times parents find themselves asking their children if they want to read Backbeard again before bed. (Link)

Kirkus Reviews

Kirkus Reviews: Backbeard: Pirate for Hire

“Having transformed himself and his crew into fashionistas (of a sort) in Backbeard and the Birthday Suit, the huge and hirsute Captain finds himself called before the Pirate Council for dress-code violations in this even better sequel. Ordered to exchange his eye-watering pink and green duds for more conventional garb or find another occupation, Backbeard sets out to look for work—landing, after several false starts, in a tea shop run by an uncommonly unflappable little old lady. A true spectacle, from red silk shoes to snappy boater, Backbeard really steps out in style across McElligott’s loud-pattern-drenched settings. His crew, from Mad Garlic Jack to swashbuckling Scarlet Doubloon, isn’t far behind—in fact, they burst in to the rescue when he’s left in charge and the tea shop’s blue-haired clientele turns ugly. Sandwiched between original and modified “Pirate Rules” on the endpapers, as well as hilarious jacket art, this knee-slapper rivals even Colin McNaughton’s Captain Abdul’s Little Treasure for freewheeling freebooter frivolity.” –Kirkus Reviews, August 1

Kirkus Reviews

Kirkus Reviews: The Lion’s Share

Starred review

Kirkus Reviews: Basic math is inescapable, even at dinner parties with the lion king. At this royal meal, the elephant takes half the cake before passing it along, the hippo takes half of that, and so on. When the cake finally reaches the ant, she struggles to cut the tiny remaining slice in two—one for her, one for the king—but it just crumbles to pieces. Mortified, she vows to bake the king a strawberry sponge cake. The other, ruder, animals, not to be outdone, each double the ant’s offering… crescending to the elephant’s hard-to-swallow pledge of 256 peanut-butter pound cakes. In addition to witnessing the occasional price of boorishness, young readers will easily grasp how fast things disappear when repeatedly halved, and how quickly numbers add up when doubled. A divided-up cake on the endpapers illustrates fractions from one to 1/128, and the o’er-hasty cake-doublings are displayed in countable cake form, from one to 256. The handsome watercolor-and-ink illustrations are as gently funny as the story, and the heavily partitioned design well suits the math lesson at hand.”—Kirkus Reviews, starred review

School Library Journal

School Library Journal: The Lion’s Share

Starred review

The king of the jungle has a small party every year for his closest friends, even though they are greedy and ill-mannered. The lion graciously passes cake to the elephant, telling him to help himself. The elephant takes half. Each animal in turn takes half of what is passed, leaving only a crumb for the ant to share with the king. Instead, the ant says that he will bake the king a fresh cake in the morning. Each animal then ups the ante by doubling the previous offer, culminating with the elephant committing himself to baking 256. This mouthwatering tale of division and multiplication will delight young readers as they imagine a palace full of cakes. The captivating ink and watercolor illustrations, enhanced with digital techniques, continually reinforce the mathematical theme with humor and detail. Many layouts effectively present a graphic display of the simple fraction concepts. The results are terrific. Because young readers will relish the absurdity of the story, it will hold up to repeated readings to reinforce math instruction.”–School Library Journal