From School Library Journal
Kindergarten-Grade 2. A very funny version of how and why the cow jumped over the moon is told, in retrospect, by an old brown horse who admires her feat and thinks that Mother Goose should have given her more air time. Previous to the cow's attempt, only horses jumped the moon after a rigorous period of training. When the bovine expresses her longing to soar over the moon herself, the horses doubt her ability but agree to give her a chance. She works hard to get in shape and succeeds, joyfully. The narrative has an informal, conversational cadence and hilarious wording. The large, soft-toned, colored-pencil illustrations in a flat primitive style have plenty of humorous touches. They show a cat with a fiddle, the little dog, the amorous dish and spoon, and barnyard animals leaping and prancing about as they encourage the cow and her horse friends as they work out in preparation for their moon shots. Pair this one with Chris Babcock's No Moon, No Milk! (Crown, 1993).?Patricia Pearl Dole, formerly at First Presbyterian School, Martinsville, VA
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Ages 5^-7. As the horse who's narrating the story tells it, Mother Goose got it wrong when she devoted only one line to the cow jumping over the moon in "Hey Diddle Diddle." The jump was a major accomplishment, and the horse has the details. You see, horses had been jumping over the moon for ages. They train to do it. But one day at the training center, a cow shows up, and at first, she's just a receptive audience. Then she starts using the training equipment. Our narrator tells her, "Honey, come on, you're a cow!" But she is not deterred. And with hard work and gumption . . . well, we know the rest of the story. Fractured and funny, this takeoff will appeal to kids slightly older than the Mother Goose crowd who will get the spoof. The colored-pencil pictures are a bit on the soft side for a story told with a Damon Runyonesque edge, but they're attractive and neatly executed. A fun read-aloud--and a tribute to hard work.
Ilene Cooper
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.