The swap by Jan Ormerod
Ill. by Andrew Joyner. Little Hare, 2013. ISBN 9781921541414.
(Age: 3+) Highly recommended. Sibling rivalry, Humour, Family.
Despite Mama Crocodile's best efforts at increasing daughter
Caroline's interest in her new baby brother, she fails at each fence
post. Giving a long sentence of similes which expound his virtues,
Caroline can only respond that he smells. Mum alludes to his lovely
scaly skin and sharp claws, but Caroline can only see how much room
he takes up on her mother's lap. She decides that she should swap
him, and goes to the baby shop where she is able to exchange the
baby for something new.
Each time she does this, the differences between her baby brother
and the animal she choses, stand out. Taking a panda, she is
embarrassed when he begins to eat the cane furniture at the cafe,
and the elephant she takes hops into the town fountain breaking it.
Each time she realises that perhaps her baby brother is not as bad
as she thinks, and so learns a lesson that will be obvious to all
readers.
Illustrated with wonderfully lively drawings of the array of animals
that live in the town will delight the readers who will see far more
each time they venture inside. I love the main street with its
different shops and shop windows with flats on top displaying a
variety of styles, I was intrigued with the details within the shops
the girl entered and loved the picture of Mama Crocodile and her two
offspring on the last page, displaying all the love and affection
that exists between the three, and no child will miss the humour of
how Caroline learns to love her brother while Mama is shopping. The
production of the book with its strong library binding makes it a
pleasure to hold and open. A wholly entertaining experience, made
all the more poignant by Jan Ormerod's death earlier this year.
Fran Knight