Whitney @ First Impressions Reviews
Written on Sep 28, 2010
Strangely enough, they all seem to have a moral. In The Squirrel and the Chipmunk for which the novel was named after, involves a love crossed squirrel and chipmunk who's respected families don't approve of the match eventually leading to the breaking of the couple. Although, a misunderstand of what jazz is also contributes. "What if jazz was squirrel slang for something terrible,like anal intercourse?" All in all a very clever look at biracial marriages.
The Motherless Bear deals with loss and pity. A young cub loses her mother and tries to live off of the sympathy and sorrow this abandonment presents, "And then she just... died". After testing all the other animal's patience she moves on to fresh blood, but doesn't go exactly the way she had hoped.
Lastly, in The Crow and the Lamb, a crow commiserates with an ewe on the trials of parenting and suggests she take up meditation, giving the sheep her first lesson. Well, let's just say you should never talk to strangers and keep both eyes on your lamb.
A hilarious book of short stories, The Squirrel and the Chipmunk didn't have me laughing as hard as some of David Sedaris' other works but was enough for people to ask, what are you reading?