From School Library Journal
---------------------------
K-Gr 2-Rainbows, smiling cupcakes, and flying unicorns in
one picture book can be a recipe for a cutesy-wootsy disaster,
but not so in this hilarious friendship story. Nothing has gone
right for Goat since Unicorn arrived. He seems to best Goat in
every way, including making it rain cupcakes. "Dopey Unicorn!
Thinks he's so great!...Look at me! I'm Unicorn! I think I'm
so-o-o cool!" the goat cries, in full-on Willems's Pigeon mode,
while sporting a plunger in mockery of Unicorn's horn. However,
when an unlikely scenario involving goat-cheese pizza brings the
two together, Goat discovers that Unicorn isn't so full of
himself after all-"Just look at your fantastic horn"; "Eh, it's
just for show. All it's good for is pointing" -and they become
fast friends. Shea's cartoon illustrations are perfectly suited
to expressing the characters' varied emotions while keeping the
story very tongue-in-cheek, with lots of giggle-worthy details.
An ideal choice for fans of silliness.-Yelena Alekseyeva-Popova,
formerly at Chappaqua Library, NYα(c) Copyright 2011. Library
Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No
redistribution permitted.
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From Booklist ( /gp/feature.html/?docId=1000027801 )
----------------------------------------------------
*Starred Review* Goat feels upstaged by Unicorn, who seems
to do everything better than he does. (Goat can almost prepare
marshmallow squares; Unicorn can make it rain cupcakes.) But
everything changes when Unicorn discovers Goat’s special gifts:
goat cheese! cloven hooves! (“What is up with those hooves?”
Unicorn asks. “Those things are out of control.”) Now it’s
Unicorn’s turn to be deflated, even kicking rainbows out of the
way, until a terrific idea is born. Together, they will be
unstoppable. Goat and Unicorn are simply shaped cartoonlike
figures with colored bodies and faces that are highly expressive,
though executed with a minimum of lines. When Unicorn is front
and center, the pages are full of soft, bright rainbow colors
with stars and lots of golden images. Goat is pictured less
energetically, and his color is fittingly blue. But as things
brighten for him, so does his bright orange background. Then, as
friends, the duo are surrounded by a circle of gold. Shea’s
cleverly written tale makes this a standout, but there’s
substance here, too. The grass may always seem greener, but the
message comes across that everybody has special strengths, and
togetherness can often maximize them. This tale of discovered
friendship will delight unicorn fans and perhaps create new fans
for goats. Preschool-Grade 2. --Edie Ching
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Review
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Goat can't stop comparing himself to Unicorn and coming up
short. With slumped shoulders and a sulky frown, Goat is the
picture of dejection. Before Unicorn moved in, he thought he was
pretty cool. But now? He just can't compete. Goat bakes
marshmallow squares to share with his friends, but Unicorn makes
it rain cupcakes! (Brightly colored ones with adorable smiles, at
that.) Goat tries to wow everyone with his new magic trick, but
Unicorn is able to turn things into gold. "Dopey Unicorn! Thinks
he's so great!" Goat scoffs and stamps in a jealous huff. But
suddenly, one slice of goat-cheese pizza changes everything. Goat
finds out that Unicorn is actually envious of him, too. Who knew
that cloven hooves were so awesome? Shea examines a universal
struggle that readers of all ages face: The grass is always
greener on the other side of the fence. Unicorn may seem like he
has it all-on every page he is surrounded by a glow of love and
adoration, with rainbows and sparkles ready to burst forth at any
moment-but that doesn't mean he's content. Even unicorns want to
eat something besides glitter now and then. Brilliant in
execution and hysterical in dialogue; Shea's pretty great, too.
(Picture book. 3-6) Kirkus"
Goat feels upstaged by Unicorn, who seems to do everything better
than he does. (Goat can almost prepare marshmallow squares;
Unicorn can make it rain cupcakes.) But everything changes when
Unicorn discovers Goat's special gifts: goat cheese! cloven
hooves! ("What is up with those hooves?" Unicorn asks. "Those
things are out of control.") Now it's Unicorn's turn to be
deflated, even kicking rainbows out of the way, until a terrific
idea is born. Together, they will be unstoppable. Goat and
Unicorn are simply shaped cartoonlike figures with colored bodies
and faces that are highly expressive, though executed with a
minimum of lines. When Unicorn is front and center, the pages are
full of soft, bright rainbow colors with stars and lots of golden
images. Goat is pictured less energetically, and his color is
fittingly blue. But as things brighten for him, so does his
bright orange background. Then, as friends, the duo are
surrounded by a circle of gold. Shea's cleverly written tale
makes this a standout, but there's substance here, too. The grass
may always seem greener, but the message comes across that
everybody has special strengths, and togetherness can often
maximize them. This tale of discovered friendship will delight
unicorn fans and perhaps create new fans for goats. - Edie Ching
Booklist"
How can an ordinary goat compete when a unicorn with magical
powers moves to town? The goat bakes marshmallow squares. The
unicorn can make it rain cupcakes! The goat tries a magic trick.
The unicorn can turn things into gold! It's no coincidence that
the goat's accomplishments look like those of the average
second-grader; his sulky tone sounds like one, too ("Dopey
Unicorn! Thinks he's so great!"). It turns out that the unicorn
actually has some goat envy ("Whoa! What is up with your hooves?
Those things are out of control!"). Now, it's the goat's turn to
show a little nonchalance: "Oh, these? These bad boys are
cloven.' It means they're split at the end." "Stupid regular
hooves," mutters the unicorn. Shea (Cheetah Can't Lose)
embellishes his characters' blobby bodies with black line accents
and, in the case of the unicorn, sparkles, stars, and rainbows.
Now firm friends, unicorn and goat fantasize about defeating evil
with their respective superpowers: "Taste my cloven justice!"
yells the goat. It's a great study in grass-is-greener envy
management and a nonstop giggle generator. Ages 2 6. Agent:
Steven Malk, Writers House. (May) PW"
Once again, Shea (Dinosaur vs. Bedtime, rev. 9/08; Dinosaur vs.
the Potty, rev. 1/11) tackles a difficult childhood
emotion-jealousy-with humor while also recognizing its
complexity. Goat begins the book by telling us, "Things are a lot
different around here since that Unicorn moved in. I thought I
was pretty cool when I rode my bike to school. Until that
show-off went flying by!" Unicorn, the shiny newcomer, seems to
be better at everything, and when Goat's admiring chorus of five
small creatures shifts its allegiance to the sparkling, magical
Unicorn, Goat gets really, really angry. Just when you think you
know where this is headed, Shea swerves from the predictable path
with some age-appropriate silliness involving Unicorn's jealousy
of Goat's goat-cheese pizza. By the end of the book Goat and
Unicorn have become buddies with complementary skill sets. Shea's
cartoon illustrations use a bright and varied palette and employ
his signature minimalist style, while exaggerated facial
expressions emphasize the difference between the central
characters: Goat's matter-of-fact grumpiness and Unicorn's
wide-eyed sparkliness. To emphasize their differences further,
Goat's narrative is shown in an old-fashioned typewriter font,
while Unicorn gets a curvy sans serif in various colors. Shea's
honest portrayal of negative emotions mixed with offbeat comedy
should make this a winner. lolly robinson Horn Book"
Rainbows, smiling cupcakes, and flying unicorns in one picture
book can be a recipe for a cutesy-wootsy disaster, but not so in
this hilarious friendship story. Nothing has gone right for Goat
since Unicorn arrived. He seems to best Goat in every way,
including making it rain cupcakes. "Dopey Unicorn! Thinks he's so
great!...Look at me! I'm Unicorn! I think I'm so-o-o cool!" the
goat cries, in full-on Willems's Pigeon mode, while sporting a
plunger in mockery of Unicorn's horn. However, when an unlikely
scenario involving goat-cheese pizza brings the two together,
Goat discovers that Unicorn isn't so full of himself after all
"Just look at your fantastic horn"; "Eh, it's just for show. All
it's good for is pointing" and they become fast friends. Shea's
cartoon illustrations are perfectly suited to expressing the
characters' varied emotions while keeping the story very
tongue-in-cheek, with lots of giggle-worthy details. An ideal
choice for fans of silliness. Yelena Alekseyeva-Popova, formerly
at Chappaqua Library, NY SLJ"
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About the Author
----------------
Bob Shea (www.bobshea.com) is the author-illustrator of four
Dinosaur vs books, and many other picture books, including I'm a
Shark (Balzer and Bray). He also wrote Big Plans, illustrated by
Lane Smith. Dinosaur was inspired by his son, Ryan. Bob is an
eager and talented promoter of his books. He has his own graphic
design company and lives in Connecticut.
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