A tie-in edition of the original storybook that inspired the hit series of the same name follows the story of sweet-but-snarky Alice, an independent young girl whose unicorn best friend constantly pops in and out of her life, triggering sparkly chaos. Illustrations. - (Baker & Taylor)
Alice never wanted a unicorn. So when a unicorn shows up at her birthday party, she's really not impressed. - (Baker & Taylor)
The original storybook that inspired the hit television series!
Go Away, Unicorn is the snarky yet sweet story of Alice, a young girl who finds a best friend in the most unlikely of places.
Meet Alice, an independent young girl whose unicorn best friend constantly pops in and out of her life unannounced.Alice isn't interested in things like rainbows, glitter, the color pink, and unicorns. So her life is turned upside-down when a real-live unicorn shows up at her birthday party and decides to be her best friend. Unicorn is a wild, wacky, party animal who does everything he can to inject fun into Alice's day.Though she would never admit it, Unicorn's zany and unpredictable personality is the perfect addition to Alice's busy life. While it's hard for her to refuse his bubbly and sparkly personality, he can really be a
horn in her side. And that's when you'll hear her say, "GO AWAY, UNICORN!"
- (
Scholastic)
Emily Mullock is a Canadian illustrator and art director of children's books, games, and animation.
- (
Scholastic)
Kirkus Reviews
First published in Canada, the book behind the popular animated TV series of the same title. Alice is not pleased when a pink-maned, white unicorn crashes her 10th birthday party. Demonstrating that "unicorns can be pretty dumb," he mistakes her pointy, gold party hat for a horn and thinks she's a unicorn, too. Despite her protests, he follows Alice home after the party, sweetly determined to earn her favor even after she doffs the hat. But he makes a nuisance of himself in a series of twee little mishaps that finally cause Alice to snap after he magically turns her hair pink ("his most favorite color"). Outraged, she says "the meanest thing she could think of: 'You are so not my friend. I would rather have a goldfish than you!' " Well, "even unicorns know when they're being insulted," and he leaves, crestfallen. In a satisfying if predictable ending, the pair is reunited when Alice misses him after all. While the trim size suggests this is an early reader, there's more of a picture-book feel to the dynamic between art and text, especially since the latter lacks cont rols that would make it particularly accessible to emergent readers. The cartoon art depicts Alice with straight dark hair, big dark eyes right out of manga, and tan skin. Thanks to its media tie-in, this unicorn's not likely to be going away anytime soon. (Picture book. 4-7) Copyright Kirkus 2019 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.