"Quirky new-baby storytime fun to quack readers up… Just ducky."
—Kirkus Reviews
A new sibling book with humor, heart, and a dash of the scientific process sure to delight young readers.
Is Stella's new baby brother a duck?
All the evidence seems to be pointing in that direction, but Stella knows that scientists can't just wing it. Further research is definitely required.
This sweet and silly book is just ducky for new siblings, fledgling scientists and anyone who loves a good laugh.
• Read-aloud books for children and siblings
• New baby gift for siblings
• Pat Zietlow Miller has published numerous children's books, including the critically acclaimed Be Kind.
Picture-book-reading new siblings who enjoyed The New Small Person, Little Miss Big Sis, and Julius Baby of the World will love the sweet and silly humor of My Brother the Duck.
"Quirky new-baby storytime fun to quack readers up… Just ducky."
—Kirkus Reviews
"Redheaded Stella Wells is a self-described ‘fledging scientist’ with a chip on her shoulder (the new sibling kind) and a hypothesis to prove: ‘my baby brother might be a duck…’ First-person narration by Miller (When You Are Brave) skews straightforwardly precocious, while Wiseman’s (When Your Llama Needs a Haircut) round-headed cast and skillful wielding of pop-off-the-page colors (including a blazing duck yellow) exudes a cheery goodwill. However disgruntled Stella may be, her STEM skills are a model for any sibling, human or otherwise."
—Publishers Weekly
"Wiseman supplies appropriately sunny cartoon illustrations (with a diverse cast that is plainly all human) to a cheery episode that fits the bill nicely for readers who relate to the young investigator in Andrea Beaty’s Ada Twist, Scientist (2016) and like STEM-ware."
—Booklist
"[A]musing. . . This lighthearted story is a fresh take on welcoming a new sibling. Words like hypothesis, evidence, and inconclusive are used in a natural way which helps children build vocabulary. A recommended purchase for library collections."
—School Library Journal
"[My Brother the Duck is] very jolly and absurdist, an original take on the new-baby 'problem' and a lighthearted introduction to the scientific method and critical thinking."
—Horn Book Magazine