SOUNDTRACK: MY MORNING JACKET-“Our World” (2011).
This song comes from the The Green Album, the grown- up-bands-cover-the-Muppets album. I can’t remember if I knew this song to begin with or if I have just listened to this record enough that it sounds so familiar.
Although MMJ have been getting into some crazy electronic and heavy music as of late, this is a very mellow song. It opens with a banjo! And while more instruments come in, it stays pretty true to what you’d think the Muppets would sing.
(Aha, thanks internet. It appeared in Emmet Otter’s Jugband Christmas). It’s a really pretty song (Paul Williams knew his way around a ballad, huh?) and this is a very nice cover.
[READ: April 16, 2011] Babymouse: Beach Babe
This the third Babymouse book opens with Babymouse dreaming (of course). But this time she’s dreaming of surfing! And she can hang ten (and other surfing lingo) with the best of them. Until a card says “Too Terrible to See.” But when she wakes up she has wonderful news…it’s the last day of school!
We also see, to my understanding, the first real encounter with Squeak, Babymouse’s little brother. When Babymouse runs for the bus, Squeak follows her calling out her name. She tells him to go home and we see poor Squeak by the side of the road, looking dejected.
But we’re soon back at school, and during the film strip, Babymouse imagines she is the Little Mermaid. But when she wakes up, the bell rings and school’s out for the summer!
When her parents tell them they’re going on vacation, she has an instant flashback to their terrible vacation last year (and the lack of “facilities” at the camp ground). But this vacation is going to be different–they’re going to the beach! And she is super excited…until the drive takes for-
ev-
er.
There’s even a surprising dream sequence about all the trees that she sees on the way down.
When they finally arrive, there’s all the usual beach fun and danger (sunburn!) and Babymouse gets to try her hand at surfing like in her dreams.
It was right around this time that I guessed that the beach that Matthew Holm was drawing was at the Jersey Shore. And indeed, it is. The end credits say that the Holms used to vacation at the Jersey Shore.
The book ends with that other classic childhood trauma–having a younger sibling and getting tired of playing with him or her on vacation. When Babymouse complains about Squeak once too often, he takes it very personally. And suddenly the story becomes a little frightening and quite touching.
For a snarky series, this one is surprisingly moving. I wonder if having this book third helped establish that sensitive side of Babymouse (which seems to be missing in later books). Good for you Babymouse!

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