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Clarice Bean Guess Who's Babysitting?

AUTHOR: Lauren Child
ISBN: 0763613738

SHORT DESCRIPTION: Uh-oh! Mom and Dad are going away for a few days, so who can babysit? Who could take on the irrepressible Clarice Bean, her pesky brother and the school guinea pig, who's visiting for spring break? It may have to be Uncle Ted. Can he survive the...

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Babysitting
         Editorial Review

Clarice Bean Guess Who's Babysitting?
- Book Review,
by Lauren Child

Amazon.com
When, for some strange reason, Clarice Bean's parents can't find anyone to babysit for a few days, they must resort to Uncle Ted, a firefighter ("so he wears special pants") who occasionally lassoes lamps and "can get you in a firefighter's carry before you can say 'Uncle Ted put me down!'" All goes well for a day or two, as Clarice Bean's daylight-despising older brother, phone-chatting big sister, accident-prone younger brother, and wandering Grandad, manage to say things like "please and thank you and sorry... and let people share their stuff without grumbling." But then her little brother Minal Cricket lets Albert (the school guinea pig on spring break) out of his hutch, and the fragile family balancing act topples. In no time, Minal is on his way to the emergency room, after an accidental bop on the head with a soccer ball, Grandad has wandered into the neighbor's house to watch the horse races, and the entire fire department shows up in time for Clarice Bean's mom's return.

It's no wonder Clarice Bean and her cool uncle get along "like a house on fire (ha ha)." Quirky and feisty, these two have a way with calamity that readers won't soon forget. Nor will they forget Lauren Child's unusual and tremendously appealing cut-paper and photographic collages. Her text wends its way around the illustrations, spiraling if need be, and growing or shrinking as appropriate. Fans of Lauren Child's Clarice Bean, That's Me will do backflips of joy to see a new title about this precocious girl and her very nutty family. (Ages 6 to 10) --Emilie Coulter

From Publishers Weekly
Encore PerformancesPicture book and fiction characters return for more tales. Fans of Clarice Bean, That's Me, can brace themselves for the heroine's latest adventure, Clarice Bean, Guess Who's Babysitting? by Lauren Child. After Clarice's Uncle Ernie, a New York City policeman, is hospitalized for slipping on a doughnut, her Uncle Ted, a fireman, is assigned to baby-sitting duty so that Clarice's mother can tend to the patient. Uncle Ted, famed for his wild tendencies, gets strict instructions Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal
Gr 1-4-Child makes the most of every word and inch of space in this uproarious romp. Clarice, first introduced in Clarice Bean, That's Me (Candlewick, 1999), explains the commotion caused by an escaped guinea pig when her firefighter Uncle Ted stays with her, her siblings, and her grandpa while her parents are both called out of town. The artwork consists of flat, sketchy cartoon figures against bright backgrounds, a variety of text fonts that somersault and seesaw, and an occasional photograph or two added to the mix. Rather than a discordant m‚lange of styles, the result is a pleasing whole that plays up the characters' eccentricities and furthers the story's absurdity. A sumptuous serving of offbeat humor and illustrative invention.-Gay Lynn Van Vleck, Henrico County Library, Glen Allen, VACopyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Ages 6-8. Everyone has a favorite uncle--a grown-up kid who almost sparkles when he walks through the door. Child brilliantly captures the magic of that favorite relative in her second book about Clarice Bean, a quirky, entertainingly muddled story about families and unconditional love. Clarice's mother is off to the city, and important business is taking Dad out of town. Who will baby-sit? Clarice's older sister "would rather look after newts from Neptune." So wild and woolly, lasso loopin' Uncle Ted gets the job of looking after Clarice and Minal Cricket, her baby brother. Will family peace prevail? Only until the guinea pig Albert escapes. Searching for the missing critter turns the world upside down--even more than usual. From plot twists to humorous, freewheeling pictures with an occasional photo worked into text that sometimes swirls around the page, this kooky offering provides a romping good time. Kelly Halls
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Card catalog description
When her Uncle Ted, the fireman, comes to stay with Clarice and her brothers and sister while her mother is away, things get somewhat hectic.


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         Book Review

Clarice Bean Guess Who's Babysitting?
- Book Reviews,
by Lauren Child

Clarice Bean, Guess Who's Babysitting?

FROM OUR EDITORS

In a delightful sequel to her award-winning book,Clarice Bean, That's Me, Lauren Child has crafted another tale of the irrepressible Clarice and her slightly offbeat extended family. In Clarice Bean, Guess Who's Babysitting?, Uncle Ted the fireman has been employed to babysit Clarice, her pesky younger brother Minal Cricket, and their typically teenaged older siblings, Kurt and Marcie. And let's not forget Grandad, who forgets plenty on his own and has a habit of wandering off and disappearing for hours on end. Thrown into the mix for a bit of adventure and hilarity is Albert, the school's guinea pig, who is being cared for by Clarice over spring break.

Life in Clarice's household is ever busy, lots of fun, and filled with the same ups and downs most kids will find in their own homes. There are family squabbles, sibling rivalries, adult idiosyncrasies, and odd little habits. And while Uncle Ted is in charge, there are plenty of crises, too, like when both Grandad and Albert go missing. The book's layout has the same anything-goes style that Clarice's family has, with words that trail in all directions, fonts that please and tease the eye, and Child's collage-like illustrations, a delightful mish-mash of ink line drawings and watercolor overlaid on snippets of wallpaper, photographs, and cut-out backgrounds.

--Beth Amos

ANNOTATION

When her Uncle Ted, the fireman, comes to stay with Clarice and her brothers and sister while her mother is away, things get somewhat hectic.

FROM THE CRITICS

Children's Literature

This hilariously chaotic sequel to Clarice Bean, That's Me screams, "Uncle Ted, put me down," and "My Uncle Ted is very cool," plus a lot of other good stuff before the story starts at the bottom of the title page with "We got a phone call at five-fifteen in the morning." Uncle Ernie, Mom's older brother, is in the hospital, so she has to go help him. The only babysitter she can find is wild Uncle Ted, a fireman. Besides Clarice, there's an older brother and sister, a little brother, Grandpa (who tends to wander off) and a guinea pig named Albert. Told with a variety of type-faces and a mix of photographs, fabrics, wallpapers and sprightly drawings, the story makes great good fun of what happens when Mom and Dad leave the kids with an inexperienced babysitter. Things go wrong in exciting ways, including a car chase to the emergency room, Albert's repeated escapes and the roaring up of the whole fire department. Author Child lovingly portrays the sequence of freedom that leads to disorder to chaos and back to comforting order, the whole zany structure resting upon Mom's safe arrival home. 2001, Candlewick Press, $16.99. Ages 5 to 9. Reviewer: Nancy Tilly

School Library Journal

Gr 1-4-Child makes the most of every word and inch of space in this uproarious romp. Clarice, first introduced in Clarice Bean, That's Me (Candlewick, 1999), explains the commotion caused by an escaped guinea pig when her firefighter Uncle Ted stays with her, her siblings, and her grandpa while her parents are both called out of town. The artwork consists of flat, sketchy cartoon figures against bright backgrounds, a variety of text fonts that somersault and seesaw, and an occasional photograph or two added to the mix. Rather than a discordant m lange of styles, the result is a pleasing whole that plays up the characters' eccentricities and furthers the story's absurdity. A sumptuous serving of offbeat humor and illustrative invention.-Gay Lynn Van Vleck, Henrico County Library, Glen Allen, VA Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.


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