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The 12 days of Christmas
2017
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An elephant parent has to take responsibility for caring for all of the gifts that arrive in this newly illustrated version of the traditional song. - (Baker & Taylor)

A whimsical story based on the classic Christmas song finds Elephant's initial delight with the gifts he receives during the 12 days of Christmas turning into dismay as the gifts become increasingly wild and numerous. By the award-winning author of Good Night Owl. - (Baker & Taylor)

In this bright, funny rendition of a favorite Christmas song, three-time Geisel-recipient Greg Pizzoli celebrates the cheerful chaos of holiday gift-giving!

It's holiday time -- and at first, Elephant is delighted to get a gift. But as the twelve days of Christmas continue, presents pile precariously higher and higher! A partridge in a pear tree? Cute! But soon, Elephant's dad despairs. Two turtle doves? THREE French hens?! And just what are they supposed to do with ten lords a-leaping? Kids will love each silly spread in this raucous take on the classic carol that is perfect for reading aloud around the fireplace.

Don't miss these other favorites from Greg Pizzoli:
The Watermelon Seed
Good Night Owl
The Book Hog
Number 1 Sam
Templeton Gets His Wish
This Story is for You
- (Grand Central Pub)

Author Biography

Greg Pizzoli is the creator of the Baloney & Friends series as well as a three-time Theodor Seuss Geisel Award recipient for The Watermelon Seed(Medal winner), The Book Hog (Honor book), and Good Night Owl (Honor book). He is also the author-illustrator of This Story Is for You, The 12 Days of Christmas, Templeton Gets His Wish, and Number One Sam. His nonfiction for children includes the New York Times Best Illustrated Book The Impossible True Story of Tricky Vic: The Man Who Sold the Eiffel Tower, and he has also illustrated picture books written by authors such as Mac Barnett, Kelly DiPucchio, Jennifer Adams, and Margaret Wise Brown. He lives in Philadelphia. - (Grand Central Pub)

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Trade Reviews

Booklist Reviews

There's no new text in Pizzoli's adaptation of the yuletide song. The joy, of course, is all in the delivery. Our cast includes a young elephant (the "me" in the song), his "true love" (an identical young elephant with a Santa hat), and an older elephant watching the gift giving. From the first gift of a partridge in a pear tree, the older elephant looks concerned. Readers who keep their eye on this elephant, despite the cavalcade of animals that follow, will see her mood deteriorate into alarm, panic, and anger. Who can blame her? She's the one with the bag of bulk birdseed, feeding the calling birds, French hens, and turtle doves, and being beset by pipers piping (rabbits with recorders), ladies dancing (cats in tutus), maids a-milking (mice with milk cartons), swans a-swimming (swans, one with an inner tube styled like Crocodile from Pizzoli's The Watermelon Seed, (2013), and so forth. Along with Mo Willems, Pizzoli is the going expert at making the simplest of characters expressive—and it pays off in a raucous but sweet finale. Copyright 2017 Booklist Reviews.

Horn Book Guide Reviews

The traditional carol's lyrics frame this boisterous telling in which a little elephant receives twelve days of Christmas presents. As the house fills with French hens, turtle doves, etc., the thrilled little elephant's beleaguered caregiver is increasingly--and humorously--overwhelmed. Pizzoli uses a Christmassy color palette to eye-catching effect; comical changes in facial expression convey the child's increasing delight and the grownup's mounting frustration. Copyright 2018 Horn Book Guide Reviews.

Horn Book Magazine Reviews

The traditional carol's lyrics provide the framework for a boisterous telling in which a little elephant and its caregiver receive presents from a well-meaning friend over the Twelve Days of Christmas. As the house fills with French hens, turtle doves, and more, the thrilled little elephant's beleaguered caregiver is increasingly--and humorously--overwhelmed by the growing menagerie. Pizzoli uses a Christmassy color palette (mostly red, green, and white) to eye-catching effect, while comical changes in facial expression convey the parallel emotions of the child's increasing delight and the grownup's mounting frustration up until the happy resolution. russell perry Copyright 2017 Horn Book Magazine Reviews.

Kirkus Reviews

The traditional holiday song is illustrated with a nontraditional approach, featuring a pair of young elephants as the gift-giver and the recipient. A young elephant and its parent must cope with the flood of animal gifts in this perky version of the popular holiday carol. The gift-giving elephant arrives wearing a red Santa hat and bearing the familiar partridge in a pear tree, continuing with the traditional gifts through seven swans a-swimming. While the lyrics remain the familiar ones, characters for the eighth through 12th days of Christmas are represented by different animals, with mice as eight maids a-milking, cats as nine ladies dancing, and so on. The parent elephant grows increasingly annoyed by the arrival of all these critters, finally bursting into tears when all the animals are assembled after the final countdown. The parent is soothed by the partridge, who flies up onto the elephant's head. The appealing animals are illustrated in cartoon style with funny hats and costumes in a fresh palette of orangey red, pink, and lime green. Children will need to be thoroughly familiar with a traditionally illustrated version of the song in order to understand this takeoff. The annoyed parent elephant is also a bit problematic to this interpretation, as the expected dynamic between "true loves" is diminished by the insertion of the parental figure. A cheerful, busy vision of the classic holiday song. (Picture book. 3-6) Copyright Kirkus 2017 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.

Publishers Weekly Reviews

A classic carol gets a dose of reality as Pizzoli (Good Night Owl) pokes fun at the material excess of the holidays. The gift giving starts small as a young elephant receives a partridge in a pear tree, delivered by an elephant wearing a Santa hat (an older sibling, perhaps). The elephant is delighted, but as additional gifts arrive—hens, geese, dancing cats, leaping frogs, and more—its parent reacts to the growing household chaos with a mix of bewilderment, disapproval, and anger. "Phew!" the adult elephant sighs, clutching a bag of bulk birdseed during the (brief) reprieve of "five golden rings." The parental elephant's frustration crescendos and gives way to tears, but a group hug sets everything right—and a closing shot of a fireplace blanketed with stockings suggests that these "gifts" have quickly become family. An irresistible read-aloud. Ages 3–5. Agent: Steven Malk, Writers House. (Sept.)

Copyright 2017 Publisher Weekly.

School Library Journal Reviews

PreS-Gr 2—The traditional lyrics of the popular yuletide song are brought to life by Pizzoli's signature art of adorable animal characters engaging in progressively zany antics. A little elephant wearing a Santa hat brings a multitude of presents that require a great deal of care, much to the dismay of the little elephant recipient's parent. By the 12th day, the cacophony of various types of fowl, milkmaid mice, dancing cats, leaping frogs, musical rabbits, and drum-banging pigs has the elder elephant glaring with scorn and finally giving way to tears. The crowd falls silent, and the young elephants offer comfort. A pear and a hug are enough to bring a hesitant smile to the adult's face. All is well, and the closing page shows the partridge in the pear tree in front of a lit fireplace with 76 stockings waiting to be filled. VERDICT Loads of fun for a small group sing-along or simply perusing for details.—Linda Israelson, Los Angeles Public Library

Copyright 2017 School Library Journal.

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