pamela
Written on Mar 22, 2018
Writing children's books is hard. They have to be short, convey a lot in their restrictive length, have good characterisation, likeable characters, and have excellent pacing and flow. This has none of those things. Charlotte Pence has utilised a forced rhyming scheme that has no rhythm. She even breaks the cardinal rule of rhyming certain words with themselves. There are no vivid descriptions to draw the reader in, and we are given no sense of the book's inherent purpose. The title suggests that children will be given an informative view of what the Vice President's job entails. The book shares nothing about that. If I, as an adult reading this can't tell you a single thing that the VP does during an average day at his job apart from attending meetings, then what hope does a pre-reading-age child have of gleaning anything from it?
The book's one saving grace is the illustrations. Karen Pence did a wonderful job of illustrating this. It had a very classic feel, one that isn't seen very often in picture books these days. They were painstakingly and lovingly created, and the one reason why I gave this two stars.
As a piece of children's literature, this falls very short of the mark. Not much research went into how to write for children, and I would, objectively, not recommend Marlon Bundo's Day in the Life of the Vice President, not when there are so many wonderful children's picture books out there.