Shoe wars /
Material type: TextPublisher: New York : Scholastic Press, 2021Description: 433 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmContent type:- text
- still image
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781338654745
- 1338654748
- 9781407191102
- 1407191101
- Siblings -- Juvenile fiction
- Contests -- Juvenile fiction
- Father and child -- Juvenile fiction
- Shoes -- Juvenile fiction
- Supervisors -- Juvenile fiction
- Inventions -- Fiction
- Shoes -- Fiction
- Humorous stories
- JUVENILE FICTION -- Family -- Siblings
- JUVENILE FICTION -- Action & Adventure -- General
- Siblings
- Contests
- Father and child
- Shoes
- Supervisors
- [Fic] 23
- PZ7.P55223 Sho 2021
Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Standard Loan (Child Access) | Hayden Library Juvenile Fiction | Hayden Library | Book | PICHON (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Checked out | 05/25/2024 | 50610024266343 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
Readers who have devoured Captain Underpants, Wimpy Kid, and the works of Raina Telgemeier will love the high-energy, hilarious antics of the Foot family from one of the largest names in the UK.
Step up to the challenge . . . win or shoes!
Meet Ruby and Bear. Their dad has just invented the most amazing thing ever -- flying shoes! But his horrible boss Wendy Wedge knows that entering flying shoes will guarantee the Golden Shoe Award, and she will do anything to win the trophy.
Ruby and Bear must outwit a bully, infiltrate a shady company, and rescue their dad all while keeping the shoes hidden. This can only mean one thing. It's . . . shoe wars!
The brand new, laugh-out-loud, spectacular stand-alone story from multi-million copy bestselling author and illustrator Liz Pichon.
Ruby and Bear's dad has just invented flying shoes. His boss, Wendy Wedge, knows that entering the flying shoes will guarantee the Golden Shoe Award, and she will do anything to win the trophy. Ruby and Bear must outwit a bully, infiltrate a shady company, and rescue their dad, all while keeping the shoes hidden.
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Booklist Review
Two children and their widower dad square off against a thoroughly despicable tycoon in this uncomplicated, heavily illustrated, shoe-centric scramble. Seeking to tie up the coveted Golden Shoe Award, footwear maven Wendy Wedge ruthlessly menaces the grieving Foot family in an effort to snatch the flying shoes Sally Foot designed before her death. Wedge looks like a shoe-in at the climatic victory awards, too--until the Foots (Feet?) pair up with the proprietor of the last independent shoe store in town and other allies to fit her for a humiliating exposé of bad behavior that promises to leave Wedge fit to be tied. Along with white-on-black pages and other typographic tomfoolery, Pichon's text is laced with so many ink-and-fill cartoon scenes, characters, and marginalia that the tale takes on a cinematic rush. The author also shoehorns in enough puns, double entendres, "foot" notes, and references to camera shoes, shushi shoes, shoes with hidden compartments, and like baroque brogans to keep readers in stitches.Kirkus Book Review
Can the Foot family win a footwear design competition against the terrible Wendy Wedge and win the Golden Shoe Award? Ruby and Bear live in the Shoebox neighborhood in Shoe Town with their Dad, Ivor Foot, in a house shaped like a shoebox. Ivor ran a shoe shop making amazing footwear designed by his wife, Sally, but after Sally died in a mysterious accident, Ivor became the victim of the evil Wendy Wedge, a jealous rival shoemaker and de facto owner of Shoe Town. Wendy made Ivor sign over the rights to all their property and designs, then demolished the shop--although Dad secretly managed to save a pair of Sally's flying shoes. Aided by his plucky kids, resourceful Dad develops a plan to foil Wendy and win the coveted Golden Shoe Award. Complex hijinks ensue ad nauseam. Although the cartoony, black-and-white line illustrations and funky use of typography lend visual variety to the pages, the book is, fundamentally, too long. The introduction of shoemakers Betty Boot and Bert Brogue, who offer support to the children and help with the competition, does not alleviate the monotony of the thin plot and repetitious shoe humor. The Foot family and Wendy appear to be White; Betty and Bert read as Black. Silly shoes and villainous caprices fail to sustain a book of this length. (Fiction. 8-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.Author notes provided by Syndetics
When LIZ PICHON was little, she loved to draw, paint, and make things. Her mum used to say she was very good at making a mess (which is still true today!). She kept drawing and went to art school, where she earned a degree in graphic design. She worked as a designer and art director in the music industry, and her freelance work has appeared on a wide variety of products. Liz is the author-illustrator of several picture books. Tom Gates is the first series of books she has written and illustrated for older children. They have won several prestigious awards, including the Roald Dahl Funny Prize, the Waterstones Children's Book Prize, and the Blue Peter Book Award. The books have been translated into 43 languages worldwide. Visit her at lizpichon.com.There are no comments on this title.