After the starred review from Kirkus, here's another one from Publishers Weekly. It's heart-warming to see so much affection for Duck. He deserves it!
There’s something particularly upsetting about losing a brand-new
possession, so it’s no wonder that Duck is feeling a little lost
himself: “I’m trying not to be depressed./ Without my socks I feel
undressed.” His friends—whose names also rhyme with “socks”—are
sympathetic and offer tips (“I may have seen your new blue socks—/ I saw
some socks down on the rocks,” says Mr. Ox). As in their 2011
collaboration, Tweak Tweak, Bunting and Ruzzier create a lightly surreal
and emotionally benevolent landscape, this time introducing a hero
who’s considerably more independent than the baby elephant from the
earlier book. The book’s gentle takeaway—reinforced by Ruzzier’s
signature offbeat aesthetic (Duck is colored soft green; Mr. Ox sits
alone in a field, painting a landscape) and Bunting’s solid,
conversational rhymes—is twofold. When you lose something, action is
better than tantrum. And when someone you know loses something, respond
with genuine helpfulness—and don’t make fun of them when it turns out
that they were (ahem) wearing their beloved blue socks the entire time.
Such love.
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