Mac Barnett, the 2025–2026 National Ambassador for Young
People’s Literature, is a New York Times best-selling author of
stories for children. His work has been translated into more than
thirty languages and sold more than five million copies worldwide.
Mac Barnett’s books have won many prizes, including two Caldecott
Honors, three New York Times/ New York Public Library Best
Illustrated Children’s Book Awards, three E. B. White Read-Aloud
Awards, the Boston Globe–Horn Book Award, Germany’s
Jugendliteraturpreis, China’s Chen Bochui International Children’s
Literature Award, the Netherlands’ Zilveren Griffel, and Italy’s
Premio Orbil. He is the cocreator, with Jon Klassen, of the
Substack Looking at Picture Books, as well as Shape Island, a
stop-motion animated series on Apple TV+, based on their
best-selling Shapes series of picture books. Mac Barnett lives in
Oakland, California.
Chris Van Dusen is the author-illustrator of many books for
young readers, including The Circus Ship and Big Truck, Little
Island, and the illustrator of the Mercy Watson and Deckawoo Drive
series. He lives in Maine.
[A] delightful, smart, and silly story about the most famous
bathtub misadventure in U.S. presidential history. Chris Van
Dusen’s bold gouache illustrations make eager use of double-page
spreads, creating the scene and capturing the sly jokes and apt
personifications within Barnett’s rhythmic prose. These
larger-than-life renderings and the no-nonsense dialogue perfectly
suit the occasion, juxtaposing the grandeur of the White House with
the exposed Taft... Fleshy, funny, and fact-checked, this perfect
Inauguration Day readaloud will plump up any presidential
collection.
—Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Van Dusen depicts the mustached, apoplectic president scrunched
with knees to chest; in gouache caricatures, he emphasizes Taft's
ample flesh and visualizes the staffers' dubious solutions (such as
greasing the tub with fresh-churned butter or blowing it "into
smithereens"). ... [T]here's no denying the riveting spectacle of
Taft's struggle.
—Publishers Weekly
Barnett spins a probably apocryphal but nonetheless hilarious
incident into a Cabinet-level crisis. ... The soapiest, splashiest
frolic featuring a head of state since Audrey and Don Wood’s "King
Bidgood’s in the Bathtub" (1985).
—Kirkus Reviews
This larger-than-life example will provoke much laughter. ... Van
Dusen’s spread of cascading water pitching Taft’s posterior into
the air and out the window will surely please the intended
audience. The energy in the gouache compositions, dominated by a
presidential blue, comes from the motion lines around the
frustrated, fleshy, quadruple-chinned head of state, as well as the
preposterous solutions proposed.
—School Library Journal
The combination of Barnett’s repetitive assonance and Van Dusen’s
gouache caricature illustrations (with strategically placed water
and bubbles) sets the hilarious tone. A concluding author’s note
reveals an archival photo of four men sitting in Taft’s
custom-built bathtub for the White House and presents the actual
facts pertaining to the president and his numerous commissioned
bathtubs. Studying the presidency need never be dull again.
—Booklist
The illustrations perfectly match the tone and tenor of Barnett’s
words. Taft is depicted in all his large, naked glory, but the
illustrations give the President an air of authority and dignity.
The book itself is physically large, though Taft is largest of all,
filling up his spacious bathroom with his voluminous body and
endless cacophony. Kids will enjoy the humor and energy in this
story and be intrigued by the notion that presidents are people,
too.
—Library Media Connection
Each page is a deliciously smooth (like chocolate!) series of
illustrations of the drama — images where the rolls of flesh almost
become animated themselves. How did Van Dusen do it? ... He makes
the most of Mac Barnett's hilarious, imaginative and yet still
respectful tale. ... This book rewards readers of all ages.
—The Sunday Plain Dealer
The funniest kids' history book we've seen in a while. ... Lots of
silly fun.
—New York Post
Van Dusen's exaggerated gouache illustrations contribute to the
author's merry absurdities.
—San Jose Mercury News
The text is humorous and early 20th century-sounding, with
oversized illustrations and suit the subject perfectly.
—Palo Alto Weekly
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