c.2018, Aladdin/Simon & Schuster Kids
$17.99 ($23.99 Canada)
40 pages

The jokeโ€™s from you!

Thatโ€™s because youโ€™re a pretty funny kid. Youโ€™re always being silly, pranking friends, goofing around, and joking to make people laugh โ€“ although sometimes, you have to admit that things get out of hand. In โ€œHow to Trick the Tooth Fairyโ€ by Erin Danielle Russell, illustrated by Jennifer Hansen Rolli, they also get out of, um, mouth.

Kaylee was the Princess of Pranking.

โ€œMischiefโ€ was practically her middle name because there wasnโ€™t one single day in a year when she didnโ€™t play a prank. She was known to prank her sister awake. Kaylee even pranked on Christmas. All her friends knew the score and they were careful around her. No sense in being her next โ€œunsuspecting victim.โ€

But, believe it or not, Kaylee wasnโ€™t the biggest prankster in the world.

No, that would be The Tooth Fairy.

Seriously, have you ever actually seen The Tooth Fairy? Yeah, what can you say about pixie dust and swift fairy wings? Not much, except: can you spot trouble here?

Anyhow, one night, right after Kaylee lost a tooth, The Tooth Fairy came to visit. She was expecting to find a small, hard, white object beneath Kayleeโ€™s pillow but we are talking about Kaylee here and instead, The Tooth Fairy got a frog.

When you pillow-prank a professional with a rubber frog, you get dozens of real frogs in your bedroom in answer.

From there, it was โ€œgame on!โ€

Kaylee pranked The Tooth Fairy with a slice of chocolate pie and hot-sauce topping. Ugh. The Tooth Fairy retaliated with a roomful of sticky ice cream with whipped cream and cherries that landed absolutely everywhere. What a mess! Of course, Kaylee couldnโ€™t leave things well enough alone so she retaliated and The Tooth Fairy retaliated again and before long, payback was no fun. Nobody meant to hurt anybody.

What happens when two big pranksters have to call off their epic prank-off? Is it possible for them to keep a long-term truce?

So you say youโ€™ve got a mischief-maker in the house. The sillier, the better for her and the more laughs, the more fun. Thatโ€™s why you need โ€œHow to Trick the Tooth Fairyโ€ around: this book is a perfect giggle-generator.

Part of the reason is that author Erin Danielle Russellโ€™s Kaylee is pure playfulness, which makes her easy for fun-loving kids to understand and identify with. Kayleeโ€™s pranking isnโ€™t malicious misbehavior or worthy of scolding; itโ€™s messy in a colossal way, but itโ€™s really just kid stuff. The Tooth Fairy, on the other hand, lends a bit of magic pixie influence to the tale. Her pranks really go over the top, and with artwork by Jennifer Hansen Rolli, mayhem adds to the freewheeling free-for-all feel of the book.

For 4- to 8-year-olds who know how to get a little wild, this book will become a favorite pretty quickly. Itโ€™s also for kids who love a good prank, and for children who havenโ€™t met The Tooth Fairy yet. The fun theyโ€™ll find inside โ€œHow to Trick the Tooth Fairyโ€ ainโ€™t no joke.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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