Reviews for There was an old astronaut who swallowed the moon!

Publishers Weekly
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Colandro’s long-running series, which puts fresh twists on the cumulative nursery rhyme “There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly,” here casts an astronaut as the central character: “There was an old lady who swallowed a star. It was bizarre to swallow a star!” In Lee’s quirky, grainy artwork, the “old astronaut” has big, bulgy eyes and an enormous jaw that expands to devour the moon. Two child characters appear as astronauts in space, where they make observations about the sun, moon, and galaxy: “The star closest to Earth is the sun. Our solar system only has one!” On Earth, they gaze skyward as a comet streaks by: “Why does the comet leave a bright trail?” By book’s end, the astronaut has swallowed the moon, meteoroid, planet, rocket, and satellite—or so it seems. Colandro offers an enjoyable readaloud filled with outer space facts, including back matter with vocabulary definitions and a search-and-find activity. Ages 4–8. (Apr.)


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Ever ready to extend her culinary experience, the old lady of song turns to astrophagy.Colandro's 17th (and counting) riff on the classic cumulative rhyme sends the space-suited elder into space to swallow the moon ("It happened at noon at noon"). She then goes on in no obviously logical fashion to chow down on a star, a planet, a comet, a meteoroid, a rocket ("It was next on the docket"), and a satellitebefore settling at last, in Lee's frenetically stippled climactic scene, amid a diverse group of awestruck children beneath a gloriously crowded planetarium "sky." In between verses two young and generally earthbound observers, one a child of color and the other white, step in to supply basic astro-facts ("That meteoroid made a loud sound!" observes one; the other explains, "It's a meteorite when it hits the ground") that are extended, at least a little, in a set of closing notes. And a search-and-find game at the end invites emergent stargazers to go back in search of various objects hidden in the cartoon starscapes. The titular old astronaut will be instantly recognizable to fans of the series as the bespectacled, white-bunned, lantern-jawed white protagonist they've come to know.The archetype's patterns are just visible enough to boost this light payload of silliness and STEM-ware into orbit. (Informational picture book. 6-8) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


School Library Journal
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PreS-Gr 2-In this fun retelling of the popular rhyme, the omnivorous old lady is an astronaut. She starts off by eating the moon, a star, a planet, a comet, a meteoroid, a rocket, and, eventually, a satellite. It is then revealed that it was her imagination and that all this time she was in a planetarium observing space up above from the museum. Each rhyming -sentence is followed by a true fact about the item being swallowed. The exaggerated -cartoon drawings highlight the nonsensical elements of the story, and more detailed material about the celestial bodies is appended. VERDICT A great introduction to early readers who are beginning to learn about space, who will laugh about the -adventures of the old astronaut and learn valuable information at the same time. Great for school and library -collections.--Annmarie Braithwaite, New York Public Library © Copyright 2019. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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