This cheery story about delighting in words and wordplay will appeal to readers who enjoy increasing their vocabularies and testing the sounds and feel of new terms... Paschkis incorporates numerous [words] in her illustrations... these gambol gleefully throughout her colorful, lively artwork featuring all-animal characters and intricate patterns. A veritable feast for word connoisseurs. -Kirkus Reviews
Julie Paschkis uses her distinctive style of colorful folk art to confect a book of wordplay with ZigZag. The eponymous main character is an alligator with a strongly developed sense of the pleasure to be had from savoring zestful words... Young readers [are sure to] appreciate both Zigzag's enjoyment of words and his dismay when, by accident, he begins to encounter them in truncated form. Here's how it happens: When ZigZag swallows the word 'tambourine,' he also swallows every non-consonant in the alphabet. 'All of the vowels were gone,' we read. 'No vowels? Seriously? Srsly. N vwls.' ... Eventually everything is put humorously to rights-ZigZag finds that he can collect vowels from friends and family-but not before young readers are given a new respect for the humble vowels that make words possible. -Wall Street Journal
This clever book is filled with words... The wonderful illustrations, in pen and ink, are so detailed, with texture that is filled with lines going every way imaginable, shading, an abundance of color, and a lot of movement. There is a classic feel, an Eastern European flavor not unlike a Ukrainian easter egg making it a feast for the eyes, and the abundance of sounds are just fun to read aloud. Librarians should put this on the top of 'to read' piles: it is very imaginative and attractive. -Katrina Yurenka, Youth Services Book Review
Paschkis plays with language and image in this sensory fantasy starring a word-swallowing alligator. ZigZag, rendered with a delicate ink filigree and calligraphically hatched scales, experiences words synesthetically... Gracefully wrought flowers and fruit give each image the feel of a stately tableau in this perception-oriented picture book exploration of words. -Publishers Weekly
Reading this book is utter revelry-what a marvelous celebration of the juiciness that language brings to our lips! Our minds! Our lives! A feast for the eyes and ears. -Flyleaf Books (Chapel Hill, NC)
A zippy, juicy, jazzy hullabaloo of a picture book... Here are some [words] of my own to tell you how much I love this story: brilliant, ingenious, clever, inventive, beautiful, ebullient, funny, emotive, whimsical, playful, joyful, dynamic. And that's just for starters. Julie is a master of incorporating words in illustrations, and though she has done this before in other books, I think she has outdone herself here. Her line work, calligraphy, rich colors and compositions are simply stunning. Each page turn is sheer delight: in addition to the words in Zigzag's mouth, other choice, sprightly, rather cheeky words dance and gambol across the pages. They are juxtaposed for maximum effect, sometimes alliterative, sometimes rhyming, sometimes to ramp up the fun of simply reading them aloud so you'll notice their wonderfulness. Spirited wordplay engages the reader just as secondary characters would in a good story, adding emotion, energy and movement, heightening the celebratory mood... Like a finely tuned piece of picture book machinery, the deftly crafted text, hand-drawn words, and fetching folkloric drawings achieve a sublime synergy in the telling of this unique tale. What an ingenious way to make us look closer at words, to appreciate their sounds, appearances and meanings! ... Young readers will revel in Zigzag's shenanigans, have a blast sniffing out new words, and will likely never take a single vowel for granted ever again. This book's not just for kids; in addition to the gorgeous art, there's enough wry wit to amuse even the grumpiest of grown-ups, as they apply their own connotations to the words. -Jama's Alphabet Soup
PRAISE FOR THE WORDY BOOK, THE COMPANION VOLUME TO ZIGZAG
Some children's books feel like classics the first time one encounters them. It's not hard to imagine young poets embracingThe Wordy Bookas warmly as new generations keep embracing The Little Prince. Naomi Shihab Nye, for the New York Times
A Publishers Weekly High-Concept Picture Book for Children
Selected for 2021 Society of Illustrators Original Art Exhibition
Kirkus starred review