
Regardless, most readers will understand what Hughes and Spires are getting at-every dog, no matter how wonky or weird, is worthy of love. There’s no denying the tenderness between this lab-coat-wearing girl and her dog, but the cobbled-together, science-project nature of this canine isn’t exactly crowd-pleasing, something Spires seems to recognize tacks, metal plates, and fur patches spring off of the dog’s body in one of the final scenes, leaving behind a (slightly) more conventional-looking misfit. Kids Can, 16.95 (32p) ISBN 978-1-55453-701-3 Spires’s characters tend to have uneasy relationships with both themselves and their environmentsfrom Binky the Space Cat. Larf fits right in with that crew, a gentle worrywart of a sasquatch who loves his peaceful, out-of-the-way life in the woods.

BINKY THE SPACE CAT by Ashley Spires & illustrated by Ashley Spires. Spires's characters tend to have uneasy relationships with both themselves and their environments from Binky the Space Cat, an adventuring feline who doesn't leave his house, to Small Saul, a gentle pirate among ruffians.

C’MERE, BOY by Sharon Jennings and illustrated by Ashley Spires.

Sure, purebred dogs are special, but is anything more lovable than a mutt? Not for the heroine of this collaboration between Hughes ( Gerbil, Uncurled) and Spires ( Edie’s Ensembles), who opens the book by proudly claiming that “When my dog was made, they used leftover parts.” Spires’s ink-and-watercolor illustrations reveal just how true that is: this dog is a Frankensteinian creation with patches of tan and gray fur stitched and stapled together, four mismatched legs (one perhaps coming from a donor Dalmatian), and a pair of “melting, soft brown eyes” that provide comfort just when it’s needed. BINKY TO THE RESCUE by Ashley Spires & illustrated by Ashley Spires.
