Reviews for Fox plays ball

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

New readers win when they play football with Fox and company. Fox’s spiky ears emerge from an old-school helmet, Bear wears purple vintage headgear, Elephant has donned a baseball cap, and Rabbit sports an upside-down sieve. Wearing only the standard shell, Snail wants to play, too—cheered on by a ladybug fan (alas, not Tabor’s Sir Ladybug character). Everyone wants to win! Steadying the ball with a trunk, Elephant expertly lofts it “far…very far”—toward a nearby snowcapped mountain. The chase is on: The animals speed after the ball on a skateboard, a scooter, and a bike, while unflappably smiling Snail moves at a snail’s pace. As the ball ricochets dramatically (depicted with rapidly careening dotted lines), Fox, Rabbit, Bear, and Elephant all miss the catch—as does Snail. When the animals all dive for the ball, Snail sensibly seeks the shell’s security. Because they all pile on Fox, the ball pops out…right to Snail! As the ladybug wildly applauds, Snail wins! And Fox sportingly congratulates the winner with “Good game!” Tabor’s perennially clever, stylish art offers unexpected perspectives and angles, and the action scenes will keep readers in suspense. In the more sedate scenes, the understated illustrations will allow youngsters to concentrate on the few and well-chosen words and to appreciate Tabor’s subtle scene-setting, buildup, and humor. Another victory from a master of the early reader.(Early reader. 4-7) Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Horn Book
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

In their newest adventure, reminiscent of "The Tortoise and the Hare," impulsive Fox (Fox the Tiger, Fox Has a Problem, rev. 7/23) and Fox's hapless friends play football. "Fox wants to win. Elephant, Rabbit, and Bear want to win. And Snail? Snail wants to win too." As in other books in the series, the digitally assembled pencil and watercolor illustrations extend and add humor to simple, repetitive text. "Elephant kicks the ball far" graces a page in which readers see the ball fly out of the field and land deep in the mountains. When the players chase the ball, they take off on skateboards, a bike, and a scooter -- except for Snail, who muscles along, playing independently. Soft lines, gentle textures, and smiling faces on cartoon-style characters (one of whom wears a colander as a helmet) give this a lighthearted, giddy tone that rewards reading practice. (c) Copyright 2025. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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