Ivy and Fletch have been best friends since babyhood, but they're in for a surprise when they start kindergarten. On the playground the girls play with the girls, and the boys with the boys. Ivy like the princess games, and Fletch has fun as a pirate, but something is missing- Games just aren't as much fun without your best friend. Can they find a common ground? Of course they can! This lively story about friendship, make believe, and getting along proves that, whether pirate or princess, a kid is still a kid (especially when a swing or a cupcake is involved).
Publishers Weekly,Best friends since their "diaper days," Ivy and Fletch get a rude awakening when they hit kindergarten and encounter voluntary gender segregation: "[W]hile Ivy and Fletch played on the swings together, all of the other girls were with the girls and the boys were with the boys." Will the allure of same-sex-only fun-the princess club for Ivy, pirates for Fletch-prove stronger than a lifelong friendship (all five years of it)? The Kargmans, a mother and daughter team (Sadie is eight), make their debut with a premise that's wryly attuned to budding boy-girl dynamics. But their literal, windy, and patronizingly cute prose ("And then came kindergarten, where the big kids go.... And nap time? That was gone, baby, gone") makes it all the more fortunate that Davenier (Miss Lina's Ballerinas) is on board. As always, her stylish watercolors delight, conveying empathy and humor in balletic, gossamer brush strokes, making the pages fly by and even the most heavy-handed messaging ("After all, there's a little pirate and princess in all of us") feel light on its feet. Ages 3-5. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.