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Overview
In this happy picture book, Madison loves pink to the limit!
Madison loves pink. In fact, “pink” was her very first word, so it was no surprise to anyone when she grew up to embrace pink with a passion: her room, her clothes, even the mashed potatoes at her birthday dinner were all pink, pink, pink.
But then Madison realizes that she has taken her love for pink a bit too far. What about her favorite brown bear, her red truck, her green balloon? Pink is great—it really is—but it needs the other colors to shine, and so does Madison!
With simple, relatable text and playful illustrations, this kindly cautionary tale will charm enthusiasts of all colors of the rainbow.
Madison covers and surrounds herself with her favorite color, pink, until the day her mother has trouble finding her.
Editorials
Publishers Weekly
Think pink" is the mantra of Madison, a girl who can't get enough of her favorite color. From a babbling baby ("Pink!" is her first word) to a youngster choosing her wardrobe and decorating her bedroom, Madison never considers alternate hues. But to this heroine, the color is more than a mere matter of taste; it embodies feelings, too ("But her pink walls and pink ceiling were lonely without a pink bedspread, pink sheets, and a pink pillow"). Readers will be hard-pressed to find a page on which the word or color pink does not appear-nearly ad nauseam. Ingram's (Boing!) illustrations in muted tones initially balance out this overabundance-a hot pink party dress tempered by a pale pink birthday cake, for instance. But once Madison makes her birthday wish "that everything in the world was pink," nearly all of the remaining pages themselves are fluorescent pink, indicating a passion that has turned to obsession. Images of Madison appear in lighter and lighter strokes, until the heroine is practically invisible-and, finally, very frustrated. Debut author Feiffer's ending feels somewhat contrived, but pink-obsessed girls will enjoy this tale, and the message will be familiar to parents whose children move from one interest du jour to the next. Ages 3-6. (Nov.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.Children's Literature
When Madison was a baby, her parents could not wait for her to say her first word. Would it be "Momma? Dadda?" No, Madison's first word was "pink." And from that day on, Madison's favorite color was pink. She dressed all in pink, she had the walls and ceiling in her bedroom painted pink, she even gave away all her non-pink toys. At her birthday party everyone ate pink cake while wearing pink party hats and playing Pin the Pink on the Rainbow. All her gifts were wrapped in pink wrapping paper, and every single gift inside was, you guessed it, pink. Madison was perfectly happy in the perfectly pink world she had created for herself until one day when things got a little out of hand. Sitting in her pink bedroom covered from head to toe in pink, Madison disappeared. Madison's tale is illustrated using simple line drawings in which the color pink is featured prominently; first a touch of pink here and there on every page in soft pastel shades, changing to a deep shocking pink covering the entire page as her obsession grows. Feiffer's simple, easy to read text, and Ingman's playful illustrations, combine to make Madison's over the top tale of obsession one that is sure to appeal to pink lovers and non-pink lovers everywhere. 2005, Simon and Shuster Books for Young Readers, Ages 4 to 8.—Pat Trattles