Available Formats
Randy Riley's Really Big Hit
By (Author) Chris Van Dusen
Illustrated by Chris Van Dusen
Candlewick Press,U.S.
Candlewick Press,U.S.
1st February 2012
United States
Children
Fiction
FIC
Commended for Parents Choice Awards (Spring) (2008-Up) (Picture Book) 2012
Hardback
32
Width 257mm, Height 295mm, Spine 9mm
505g
Randy likes space, robots, and baseball, but he can't ace everything . . . or can he Chris Van Dusen knocks one out of the park with a comical ode to ingenuity.
Randy Riley loves two things: science and baseball. When it comes to the solar system, the constellations, and all things robot, Randy is a genius. But on the baseball diamond Not so much. He tries . . . but whiffs every time. Then, one night, Randy sees something shocking through his Space Boy telescope: its a fireball, and its headed right for his town! Randy does the math, summons all of his science smarts, and devises a plan that will save the day in a spectacular way. Once again, Chris Van Dusen winds up his visual humor, dizzying perspectives, perfect pacing, and rollicking rhyme and delivers a hit to make readers stand up and cheer.
Van Dusens tale is inventive and humorous. Randy is a lovably nerdy genius who is admired for his brains and is part of a team that doesnt seem to mind his poor batting average. Gouache paintings use clean crisp lines and sharp, bright colors in a variety of perspectives. Everything from the cars in the driveways to the living-room dcor places the events in pre-computer, mid-20th-century America. A cunning twist on the heroic home run that wins the game.
Kirkus Reviews
With all the bases covered-musical text, entertaining artwork, and surefire subject matter-this title bats 1,000 for group or lapsit read-alouds.
School Library Journal
Randy may be an easy out with a bat, but his heroism merits a spot at the heart of any budding geeks lineup.
Booklist
In this retro rhyming tribute to mind over batter, Van Dusen casts a wide net: anyone who's a fan of nerds, "Casey at the Bat," classic science fiction, or mid-century design should find something to like in these eye-popping pages.
Publishers Weekly
Children will enjoy the adventures of a young boy who used his love of baseball to save the day.
Library Media Connection
Young Randy Riley has two passions: science and baseball. But he's more of a student than an athlete. As Chris Van Drusen puts it in verse: "See, Randy was a genius;/he just couldn't hit the ball./He struck out every time at bat./He wasn't good at all." But when Randy spies through his "Space Boy telescope" a massive fireball hurling toward Earth, his way with robots saves more than a game. In science fiction, there's more than one way to hit a home run.
USA Today
Chris Van Dusen's RANDY RILEY'S REALLY BIG HIT won me over at first swing... There's a cool retro feel to this sci-fi rhyming book along with some gloriously comic special effects. It's just scary enough to be a page turner and brings a whole new twist to kids and baseball.
The Boston Globe
With a nod to "Casey at the Bat," a dash of science geek, and the impending destruction of the earth, RANDY RILEY'S REALLY BIG HIT has something for everyone.
Huffington Post Parents blog
Chris Van Dusenis the author-illustrator ofKing Hugos Huge EgoandThe Circus Ship,and the illustrator of the best-selling Mercy Watson books by Kate DiCamillo. He lives in Maine.