Mr. King is a cat who likes new things. In fact, "LOTS of new things. As
soon as one of his things becomes the tiniest bit old, he tosses it into
the nearby pond and replaces it with a new one." Happily, this works
just fine for a while. But then one day while attempting to fish in this
same pond, Mr. King is terrified when he pulls up what he believes is a
gigantic monster. Only it turns out it's not a monster at all. It's a
tangle of his own discarded things, come back to scare him! Geneviève
Côté has created a terrific introduction to the causes and effects of
pollution and overconsumption with this lively and funny picture book.
As with so many big ideas, the environmental message here is quite
simple and easy to understand when explained at a child's-eye view. The
story is gentle, humorous and not at all preachy, and the artwork is
clean and open, with most of the visual focus on Mr. King and his range
of intense emotions. The ways Mr. King finds to repurpose all of his
resurrected things at the end of the book could inspire all kinds of
classroom discussions about what efforts children might make to recycle
their things for other people or other uses, as well as how not to waste
things in general. It could also work as a jumping-off point for a
project turning children's found objects into their own works of art.