Reviews for Sydney & Taylor explore the whole wide world
Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
At every turn of events, the title characters’ personalities seem to shift and reverse. Sydney and Taylor live in a burrow under Miss Nancy’s potting shed. Sydney is a skunk who loves to sit quietly and listen to the sounds of the world above. Taylor is a hedgehog who longs to travel and explore the world beyond the burrow. Sydney cares about his friend and wants him to be happy, so he agrees to an expedition. Almost immediately, however, Taylor becomes nervous and worries that his fear of new things and strangers will overcome him; Sydney staunchly reassures him. Although they have never even met Miss Nancy and know nothing of what waits beyond her fence, they set off feeling “wild and fearless and free.” At first Taylor is the brave one, mapping the route and leading the way. But with every new encounter Taylor’s fright takes over, and it is Sydney who provides leadership and solutions. To their great relief—and with a little help from Miss Nancy—the intrepid adventurers arrive home safely. Davies describes the action with verve, humor, and compassion, employing vivid, expressive syntax as she focuses on the characters’ nonfussy, genuine friendship and the shifts in their dynamic. Hocking’s very carefully rendered, brightly colored illustrations closely follow the events, capturing the friends’ personalities and their every emotion; their burrow, seen in an early cross-section, is a delight unto itself. An enduring friendship wins the day in this chapter-book adventure. (Fantasy. 6-8) Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Publishers Weekly
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This genial series opener by Davies (Panda Pants) introduces two friends who inhabit a cozy burrow under a potting shed: Taylor, a hedgehog with big ideas, and Sydney, a contented skunk. When Taylor gets a notion to see the Whole Wide World, contrary to the animals’ homebody natures, the friends set off, encountering challenges en route. These include their own poor map-reading skills, a ferocious dog, and frogs—dressed in old-fashioned bathing suits and straw boaters—who refuse to be hunted (“ ‘Hunt what?’ asked another frog. ‘Well... you,’ said Taylor, who was a very honest hedgehog”). Gouache and colored-pencil illustrations by Hocking (the Max Explains Everything series) render the companions as sweetly expressive creatures who share their richly imagined environment with snails and insects. Although the friends’ dynamic is fairly one-sided, with Sydney alternately encouraging and pushing the anxious Taylor to follow through with the desired expedition, Taylor’s perseverance (and readers’) is rewarded with the satisfaction of a completed journey, a return to home’s comforts, and the suggestion that a story of adventure might be a treasure equaling the adventure itself. Ages 6–9. (Feb.)
Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
At every turn of events, the title characters personalities seem to shift and reverse. Sydney and Taylor live in a burrow under Miss Nancys potting shed. Sydney is a skunk who loves to sit quietly and listen to the sounds of the world above. Taylor is a hedgehog who longs to travel and explore the world beyond the burrow. Sydney cares about his friend and wants him to be happy, so he agrees to an expedition. Almost immediately, however, Taylor becomes nervous and worries that his fear of new things and strangers will overcome him; Sydney staunchly reassures him. Although they have never even met Miss Nancy and know nothing of what waits beyond her fence, they set off feeling wild and fearless and free. At first Taylor is the brave one, mapping the route and leading the way. But with every new encounter Taylors fright takes over, and it is Sydney who provides leadership and solutions. To their great reliefand with a little help from Miss Nancythe intrepid adventurers arrive home safely. Davies describes the action with verve, humor, and compassion, employing vivid, expressive syntax as she focuses on the characters nonfussy, genuine friendship and the shifts in their dynamic. Hockings very carefully rendered, brightly colored illustrations closely follow the events, capturing the friends personalities and their every emotion; their burrow, seen in an early cross-section, is a delight unto itself. An enduring friendship wins the day in this chapter-book adventure. (Fantasy. 6-8) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.
With a nod to The Wind in the Willows (not to mention that wink to the author of the All-of-a-Kind Family books), Davies sends an odd-couple pair of animal burrow mates out to explore the “whole wide world.” Taylor, a hedgehog, is the one who has the big idea of an outing, but it’s Sydney the skunk who sheds his initial reluctance to pull his suddenly timorous roomie out of their comfy digs beneath the potting shed of the (supposedly) oblivious Miss Nancy. And what do they discover? Along with steep hills to tackle, hedges to poke through, and trackless meadows, it seems that someone neglected to bring provisions, that streams are for falling into, that when an overly frisky dog runs up, it’s good to be a skunk (but not for the dog), and that when there’s a busy road to be crossed, a gardener like Miss Nancy is handy to have around to stop traffic. Hocking illustrates the short chapters with delicately detailed scenes of settled, peaceful countryside and cozy subterranean digs well furnished with books and easy chairs. “Best expedition ever,” Sydney sighs afterward, collapsing into one of the latter. “We’ll see,” replies the newly emboldened Taylor, poring over a large map. Readers of this series kickoff, which lends itself equally well to solo or shared reading, will be eager to see, too.