Jack, Jill, and Rex are excited to play a game of Go and Get! The rules are simple: on the count of three, each player must go and get something that begins with a certain letter. While Jack's and Jill's picks always fit the bill (What starts with F? Frog! Fish!), Rex keeps getting it wrong (a duck?)--or does he? David LaRochelle and Mike Wohnoutka share a laugh-out-loud primer on subverting expectations that will have readers clamoring to play Go and Get themselves--and competing to see who can come up with the most creative answers.
Mike Wohnoutka has illustrated more than thirty books for young readers, including How to Apologize and the See the Cat series, written by David LaRochelle. He is also the author and illustrator of Ups and Downs: A Book of Emotions and other picture books. Mike Wohnoutka lives with his family in Minneapolis.
In this peppy read, creative partners LaRochelle and Wohnoutka (See the Cat: Stories About a Dog) introduce "Go and Get"--an "eye spy"-like alphabet game that keeps three players on their toes. . . . The unflagging energy and creative play on offer should soon prompt readers to transfer the game from picture book to real life.
--Publishers Weekly
From the Geisel Award-winning team behind See the Cat (2020) comes another surprising, amusing, and educational treat for beginning readers. . . . Expert pacing enhances the humor. Expressive cartoons highlight the deadpan moment before the narrator (and readers) catch on to Rex's unexpected wins. . . . Quirky, unexpected fun.
--Kirkus Reviews
As in See the Dog: Three Stories About a Cat (BCCB 7/21), LaRochelle offers a wonderfully cheeky but absolutely functional sendup of the early reading primer, with an engaging narrator and a familiar premise. While the phonics lesson is obvious, the actual building of literacy skills is stealthier, with vocabulary varying in sophistication and sentence structure getting more complicated as the chaos increases. The art is uncomplicated but essential in understanding the humor, building on the visual literacy that picture books have likely already established for young readers. This is a fanciful offering that proves phonics can still be fun.
--The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
A perfect book for kids who know the alphabet but aren't yet strong readers -- or for any kid who likes to laugh. . . With comical illustrations and a brief, easy-to-read text, this book is both funny and subversively educational.
--The Star Tribune
This delightfully funny picture book is great for preschoolers and kindergartners learning their alphabet.
--Book Riot