Coming September 2, 2025. Pre-order today!By: Kristen Remenar / Illustrated by: Matt FaulknerWhat's on the menu again?Owl is hosting a Fall Feast, and Platypushis favorite didgeridoo musicianis joining! But what do you serve someone who is mammal, bird, an
By: Kristen Remenar / Illustrated by: Matt Faulkner
Owl is hosting a Fall Feast, and Platypushis favorite didgeridoo musicianis joining! But what do you serve someone who is mammal, bird, and reptile?
Checking in with his friends offers no good insight. In fact, he learns that Groundhog is lactose intolerant, Hare has an allergy to carrots, Sparrow is a vegetarian, and Tortoise prefers to eat the flower centerpiece! Will Owl be able to see past his preconceptions and prepare a delicious feast for all his friends, whatever species they may be?
A funny and relatable seasonal picture book for parents looking to teach 3-7-year-old kids about accepting differences, looking beyond stereotypes, and friendship.
If you like this book, youll enjoy these:
Squirrel Needs a Break
Groundhog’s Dilemma
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Kristen Remenar, author
Kristen Remenar is a children’s librarian, writer, teacher, and national speaker on literacy. She is married to author/illustrator Matt Faulkner. She is the author of Groundhog’s Dilemma and Squirrel Needs a Break.
Read more about Kristen.
Matt Faulkner, illustrator
Award-winning children’s book author and illustrator Matt Faulkner has illustrated twenty-nine books and written and illustrated seven more since he began his career back in 1985, including Groundhog’s Dilemma, Thank You, Squirrel Needs a Break, Sarah, Gaijin: An American Prisoner of War, and Because I Could Not Stop My Bike. Matt is married to author and librarian Kristen Remenar.
Read more about Matt.
School Library Journal
Just as hes planning a fall feast for a special guest, Australian didgeridoo player Platypus, Owl learns that his friends have never expressed that they dont like his meals and have unspoken food preferences. The menu needs to be perfect, but now with Owls fears exacerbated by the not-so-good news about his self-proclaimed, perfect dishes, will the talented Platypus and Owls friends have a fiasco? Remenar depicts animals as relatable characters conveying human behavior, which provides readers with an alternate perspective on conduct in complex social settings. Faulkners use of anthropomorphic characterization adds quality to the visualization and tone of the text. Despite the fact that the story features a didgeridoo player, Aboriginal culture and values are not depicted. The story shows its audience that perspectives from others can help them recognize their own behaviors, and that they can reframe displeasure by learning to offer constructive criticism in social settings and personal relationships. It teaches young readers the value of using direct communication, making observations, and avoiding broad assumptions, and can serve well as a library or classroom staple to help children develop a moral compass to guide them in making thoughtful decisions. VERDICT A warm title for young readers about honest and effective communication, friendship, and the understanding that differences are worth celebrating.
Kirkus Reviews
An aim to please isnt enough when preconceptions rule.
Owl, a somewhat pompous old-guard avian gentleman given to phrases such as egads and my good man, holds an annual autumn banquet for his animal friends. (All are anthropomorphized, recognizable from two previous books, and, on a non-naturalistic scale, almost all are the same size.) Famous didgeridoo player Platypus unexpectedly accepts a dinner invitation, putting fanboy Owl in a dither: What to serve? Reasoning that Platypus is a bit like a reptile, but also a bit like a bird, and also a bit like a mammal, Owl makes several assumptions about what the guest of honor would like, asking his friends for confirmation. Surely Platypus will enjoy beetles added to the cricket chutney (for extra crunch)? And certainly milksomething all mammals drinkshould be on the menu? Owls friends gently disabuse him of his notionsand point out that they havent exactly been enjoying the food hes been serving up. Bear proposes asking Platypus what he wants, but Owl prefers to dictate the menu; ultimately, a shortage of side dishes prompts a potluck and a sensible resolution. Rendered in an autumnal palette, the colorful illustrations are amusing and accomplished, the plot brisk enough, and the point obvious but worth making. Owls problems are self-created: perfectionism, an inability to accept help, and untested beliefs.
A clever tale of a know-it-all who at last learns to listen.
Hardcover
ISBN: 978-1-62354-371-6
Ages: 37
Page count: 32
11 x 81/2
Publication date: September 2, 2025
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