From Publishers Weekly
Reiss (How Murray Saved Christmas) once again unleashes his knack for catchy, if occasionally forced, rhymes in another slapstick outing. Ned, when stumped at what to bring to school for show and tell resorts to a homemade Rube Goldberg contraption he dubs a "Word Mix-up Ray." His invention transforms his "aunt" into a "tuna," the grocer's "peas" into "apes" and his classmates, well "He made Brian a brain, with a big throbbing thinker,/ Changed Nat to an ant and made Kristen a stinker." A catastrophic field trip to the art museum finds Ned gleefully modifying the gallery ("making piecrust from pictures that hung on the walls," among other things), but eventually he finds a way to reverse the damage. Reiss's anagrams and corny light verse will appeal to a punchy sense of humor, but Cressy's colored pencil illustrations fare less well. Brisk, stylized cartoons reveal the artist's roots as an animator, but a grayish cast to the overall coloration dulls the spreads. It's an entertaining excursion nonetheless. Ages 5-up.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From School Library Journal
Gr 1-4-This oversized book tells in rhyme the tale of a young inventor who assembles a gadget that transforms items into anagrams: a shoe becomes a hose, a lamp turns into a palm, etc. Classmates suffer the consequences as well. Nat becomes an ant and Kristen a stinker. Even worse, during the school trip to an art gallery, Ned transforms the sculpture of "The Kiss" into skis and pictures turn to pie crust. The protagonist rights most of the wrongs and returns home to consider his next creation. Affable cartoon illustrations assist the comedy that only can be appreciated by those able to understand anagrams, but the book will certainly spur follow-up attempts at wordplay by older readers.
Gay Lynn Van Vleck, Henrico County Library, Glen Allen, VA
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
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