When one is something of a loner, making a friend can be a very big deal indeed. That friend can become the center of one's life, and a much needed presence. In today's picture you will meet a little boy who makes a very special friend indeed, and who then discovers that this friend creates some rather challenging problems.
Lizard from the park
Lizard from the park
Mark Pett
Picture Book
For ages 5 to 7
Simon and Schuster, 2015, 978-1-4424-8321-7
Every week day Leonard walks home from school by himself,
so it is not surprising that on that particular spring afternoon Leonard is
walking home through the park on his own. In the deepest and darkest part of
the park Leonard finds a very large egg, which he puts into his backpack and takes
to his apartment home.
For the rest of
the afternoon Leonard plays with the egg and that night he even sleeps with it.
The following morning the egg starts to “jiggle” and “crack” and then a little
green lizard emerges. Leonard decides to call the lizard Buster and from that
day on the two are inseparable. Leonard shows Buster all his favorite places in
the city and they have a wonderful time together.
Not surprisingly
little Buster grows, but what Leonard does not expect that Buster keeps on
growing until he is so huge that even a disguise doesn’t cover up the fact that
he is very large and very green. Buster is going to have to stay in Leonard’s
bedroom and this makes the lizard unhappy. When Buster outgrows Leonard’s bedroom,
Leonard has to reassess. Something has to be done about Buster.
In this clever
and charming picture book we see how a little boy develops a very special
relationship with an animal, but in the end he realizes that his new friend
cannot go on living with him. What makes this book especially clever is that we
are given clues throughout the book that Leonard is not alone and that maybe,
just maybe, there is someone out there who knows exactly how he is feeling.
In this book beautifully
atmospheric illustrations and a powerfully simple story are brought together to
give readers a memorable story experience.