Synopses & Reviews
From the illustrator of the #1 smash The Day the Crayons Quit comes another bestseller — a giggle-inducing tale of everything tossed, thrown, and hurled in order to free a kite!
When Floyd's kite gets stuck in a tree, he's determined to get it
out. But how? Well, by knocking it down with his shoe, of course. But
strangely enough, it too gets stuck. And the only logical course of
action... is to throw his other shoe. Only now it's stuck! Surely
there must be something he can use to get his kite unstuck. An
orangutan? A boat? His front door? Yes, yes, and yes. And that's only
the beginning.
Stuck is Oliver Jeffers' most absurdly funny story since
The Incredible Book-Eating Boy. Childlike in concept and
vibrantly illustrated as only Oliver Jeffers could, here is a picture
book worth rescuing from any tree.
Review
"Jeffers' light-handed illustrations are hilariously droll....The giggle-inducing conclusion leaves some stuff, um, up in the air."
Kirkus Reviews (Starred Review)
Review
"Yields a childlike aesthetic sure to tickle the funny bones of its target audience — and of the adults who share the story with youngsters."
School Library Journal (Starred Review)
Review
"With deceptive simplicity and sophisticated illustration, this comic look at problem solving will have wide appeal."
Booklist
About the Author
Oliver Jeffers (www.oliverjeffersworld.com) makes art and tells stories. His books include
How to Catch a Star; Lost and Found, which was the recipient of
the prestigious Nestle Children's Book Prize Gold Award in the U.K. and
was later adapted into an award-winning animated film;
The Way Back Home; The Incredible Book Eating Boy; The Great Paper Caper; The Heart and the Bottle, which was made into a highly acclaimed iPad application narrated by Helena Bonham Carter;
Up and Down, the New York Times bestselling Stuck; The Hueys in the
New Sweater, a New York Times Best Illustrated Book of the Year;
and This Moose Belongs to Me, a
New York Times bestseller. Originally from Belfast, Northern Ireland, Oliver now lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.