Quick! Go buy some cool House of Deadleg tees featuring my illustrations over at my Teemill store. Suitable for kids and big kids.

Outfoxed

Book review written on July 25, 2017

Outfoxed introduces us to Harold, a young fox who yearns to be a detective and only ever eats cheese. One day Harold’s dad decides it’s time for him to get his head out of his detective stories, get outside and catch a chicken like a proper fox.

Harold’s eager to show his dad that he’s got what it takes, and he easily finds a coop full of chickens and catches one, but then on the return journey he strikes up a conversation with the chicken which leads to him having a mild existential crisis, and while he’s distracted the chicken vanishes. Dad’s not happy that the chicken’s gone missing, and so next day Harold plays detective to try and track it down. When he returns to the last place he saw the chicken he deduces it was stolen, and the chase is on to try and track down the thieves’ responsible, rescue the chicken, and save the day.

This is a beautifully made little book. It’s smaller than a standard picture book, printed on thick matte paper, and with no end-papers the story pages fill the whole book from front to back cover. The artwork is colourful and vibrant, with lots of textures and patterns giving it a hand-made collaged feel, though occasionally it can be a little overwhelming, and once or twice I had to go back to look for something I’d missed on the previous page. At one point I thought I’d missed a page by accident, but that wasn’t the case. The story had skipped from one scene to another without any further elaboration, which, together with the thickness of the paper, was a bit confusing.

The book’s aimed at around ages 5–7, which seems about right. I read it to my three children, who are ranged 3–7, and they all enjoyed the story without any questions. I would have liked to have seen Harold’s investigation expanded on in a bit more detail – one of my favourite bits was the questioning of potential suspects – and I can’t help but think that, at the end, Harold made a bit of a problem for himself in future.


This review originally appeared on the AOI blog.


What did you think?

I enjoy writing, but I'm not pretending to be any good at it. Let me know your thoughts on my rambling on one of the channels below.

You can drop me a quick message on Twitter, Facebook or Instagram if that's your thing, or even an old fashioned(?) !

Thanks for stopping by:)

More blog posts

  • Chromatopia

    Book review

    READ MORE
  • Iron Heart

    Case study

    READ MORE
  • Cereal box mascots

    Case study

    READ MORE
  • A career in illustration

    Blog post

    READ MORE
  • Urban Jungle

    Book review

    READ MORE
  • Becoming a Successful Illustrator

    Book review

    READ MORE
  • So that was 2017

    Blog post

    READ MORE
  • The Golden Secrets of Lettering

    Book review

    READ MORE
  • Jon Burgerman's Daily Doodle

    Book review

    READ MORE
  • Art play

    Book review

    READ MORE
  • Rubber stamping

    Book review

    READ MORE
  • Supertato

    Book review

    READ MORE
  • The Art Test

    Blog post

    READ MORE
  • Random sprout generation

    Case study

    READ MORE
  • Generative Art

    Blog post

    READ MORE
  • Variable Images – Combining variable data and generative art in InDesign

    Blog post

    READ MORE
  • Realistic clouds in Illustrator

    Tutorial

    READ MORE

    “We asked Simon to create a portrait as the winning prize for our Extreme Readers competition – which saw children all over the North Yorkshire Coast reading in weird and wonderful places. Simon kept us up-to-date throughout the process and created a beautiful drawing… the winning family absolutely loved it.”

    Hannah Riley, National Literacy Trust

    “Simon delivered the first few illustrations in sketch form, and we knew he was going to nail it… On budget and on time every step of the way, Simon was not only a genius illustrator but a lovely person to work with… He has a talent for taking the everyday and making it sing… He delighted our audience with his clever and cute characters, and went beyond what we thought was even possible. We'd work with him again in a heartbeat…”

    Jennifer del Greco, pndu.org

    “…a very creative thinker who is not afraid to push boundaries and to make people think… a unique style and can turn his hand to any type of project to produce something original…”

    Follow me on Instagram for works-in-progress, sketches, etc.