A latest entry in the picture book series that includes Little Elliot, Big City finds the polka-dotted elephant and his best friend, Mouse, visiting the country during the autumn season and enjoying a quiet day of playing in the leaves, picking apples and sitting beneath beautiful trees. - (Baker & Taylor)Elliot the little elephant and his best friend, Mouse, play hide-and-seek during an autumn vacation in the countryside. - (Baker & Taylor)
It's autumn in the Big City! Little Elliot and Mouse love the hustle and bustle of the city streets. But sometimes it feels like there are too many people, too many noises—just too much! The best friends decide to get out of town for a vacation in the countryside. There, they'll discover the sights and smells of autumn in the country. Everything is more fun when shared with a friend! - (McMillan Palgrave)
Mike Curato is an illustrator who loves small treasures. He has illustrated many books for children and is the author and illustrator of Little Elliot, Big City; Little Elliot, Big Family; and Little Elliot, Big Fun. You can find him on any given day walking around the city, eating a cupcake (or thinking about it). - (McMillan Palgrave)
Booklist Reviews
In his fourth outing, Little Elliot and his friend Mouse venture into the countryside to escape the clamor of the city. The friends have a blast picking and eating apples, jumping in leaves, and playing hide-and-seek. After Elliot hides himself a little too well in a cornfield, he's separated from Mouse. The white space surrounding Elliot shows how alone and anxious he is. But don't fret! Mouse comes up with a nifty way of finding Elliot, leading to a satisfying resolution that includes a farm feast and a campout under the stars. Part of the delight of the series is seeing the pale pair (Elliot's blue and pink polka dots are very faint) juxtaposed with the realistic setting. Curato colors his pencil illustrations digitally, and the resulting artwork offers a wondrous presentation of the russets, greens, and golds of trees on rolling hills, very like Grant Wood's idyllic farm landscape paintings. This charming celebration of friendship (and fall) deepens with each rereading. Copyright 2017 Booklist Reviews.
Horn Book Guide Reviews
In their fourth sweetly nostalgic book (Little Elliot, Big City, et al.), polka-dotted elephant Little Elliot and his friend Mouse take a break from the Edward Hopperesque city's bustle to enjoy the countryside. Following a brief separation (conveyed in sepia tones) during a game of hide-and-seek, Elliot discovers Mouse and new barnyard friends by following his trunk. Copyright 2018 Horn Book Guide Reviews.
Kirkus Reviews
Little Elliot (a small, white pachyderm with pastel polka dots) and his bestie, Mouse, need a respite from the big city's grating sounds, slightly sickening smells, and frenetic pace. The fourth in Curato's Little Elliot series opens in an unnamed but recognizable New York City (again realized in sepia tones and 1940s fashions) but quickly follows the two companions into the rolling hills of the country. While young readers will enjoy tracking the friends' bucolic autumnal escape (lolling under apple boughs, frolicking in leaf piles, crawling through logs, hiding in pumpkin patches), they might miss the pre-World War II period details of Little Elliot's earlier urban adventures, those grainy snapshots from another era in felted browns. Indeed, all appears golden, barn red, and mossy green in the smooth, digitally colored farmland. When Little Elliot finds himself alone in a cornfield at nightfall, a double-page spread of spreading dusky darkness effectively breaks up the cri sp clarity of the sunny country narrative with palpable fear. "He waited and waited, but Mouse never came." Anxiety is banished when the whiff of apple pie tickles Little Elliot's trunk and leads him to the waiting arms of Mouse and new barnyard friends—and a sweet feast! A yummy, happy resolution—perfectly delectable to the preschool crowd. (Picture book. 3-6) Copyright Kirkus 2017 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
Publishers Weekly Reviews
In this charming fourth outing for Curato's polka-dotted elephant Little Elliot and his friend Mouse, the companions take a needed break from the noise and chaos of their 1940s-esque Manhattan, hopping a bus for the countryside. After arriving at an idyllic farm, the two eat apples, soak up the autumn colors, and play hide-and-seek. Elliot's hiding place in the cornfield is a little too effective, but Mouse's ingenuity and pie-making skills reunite the friends—and result in a "fall feast" with some new barnyard pals. Curato's lush illustrations revel in the calm of rural expanses ("The country is even bigger than the city!" Elliot exclaims), creating a sense of palpable relief as the friends relax. Never underestimate the power of a getaway to rejuvenate one's spirits and friendships. Ages 4–8. Agent: Brenda Bowen, Sanford J. Greenburger Associates. (Aug.)
Copyright 2017 Publisher Weekly.
School Library Journal Reviews
PreS-Gr 1—Little Elliot, the tiny, polka-dotted elephant of Little Elliot, Big City and Little Elliot, Big Family, and his friend Mouse need a break from the hustle and bustle of New York City. So it's off to the country to take in the autumnal foliage. Little Elliot panics when Mouse fails to find him during a game of hide-and-go-seek, but the pachyderm smells something sweet and heads to a farmhouse. There, he finds a pie, which Mouse and some new pals baked to lure him out, and the tale ends with a fall feast and a cozy night beneath the stars. Making excellent use of light and shadow, the painterly illustrations are sumptuous, dominated by oranges, reds, and golds. Curato brings to life the fall countryside just as effectively as he does the urban setting. However, compared with other "Little Elliot" installments, which offer rich explorations of friendship and bravery, the plot is a little unfocused. The drama around Elliot being unable to locate Mouse comes relatively late in the game and is resolved fast, and the titular "fall friends" seem to arrive out of nowhere (Mouse meets them off-page). Still, Elliot is a winsome protagonist, and the charming visuals will entice children. The gentle prose makes this book suitable for a quiet storytime or a soothing bedtime read. VERDICT Recommended as an additional purchase or for collections where Little Elliot fans abound.—Mahnaz Dar, School Library Journal
Copyright 2017 School Library Journal.