What Makes Me Special?: A Review of I’m a Dumbo Octopus!: A Graphic Guide to Cephalopods 

I’m a Dumbo Octopus!: A Graphic Guide to Cephalopods 
Written and illustrated by Anne Lambelet 
Published by Lerner Publishing Group/Graphic Universe 
Ages 8-12 
Available March 4, 2025 

Have you ever wondered what it’s like to have nine brains or be able to shoot ink to escape dire situations? In this graphic guide, Grimpy, short for Grimpoteuthis, the scientific name for dumbo octopuses, teaches readers about his cephalopod friends and shows all the things that make them different. He introduces individual species within the cephalopod class, such as cuttlefish and coconut octopuses, showing off their fascinating characteristics and abilities, like using color to communicate and making tools out of the environment. Meanwhile, Grimpy becomes increasingly disheartened when he can’t figure out what makes dumbo octopuses special. In the end, his friends come together to share cool facts about dumbo octopuses that make them unique. Grimpy realizes that he is just as unique as his other cephalopod friends.  

By creating an amusing “tour guide” with Grimpy the dumbo octopus, Anne Lambelet successfully creates a fun and personable way to learn about cephalopods in this graphic nonfiction book. Jam-packed with interesting facts, readers will gain a thorough understanding of this class of animals without feeling overwhelmed with information. Lambelet also adds a touching storyline of celebrating each other’s differences through Grimpy and the other cephalopods sharing their unique skills. At the end, Lambelet includes a glossary with illustrations reviewing each important term introduced in the book, as well as a photograph of a dumbo octopus. Although Lambelet doesn’t have a background in marine biology or ocean science, she includes a selected bibliography of her research and a reading list for readers who want to learn more about cephalopods. Lambelet’s cartoon-style illustrations balance her informative text by bringing more humorous personality to the facts she shares. However, the red, pink, and blue color palette limits her depiction of some of the more colorful capabilities of cephalopods, like camouflage and communication. A charming adventure through the fascinating animal class of cephalopods, I’m a Dumbo Octopus! is an entertaining addition to ocean-themed lessons or programs.  

Butler Bookshelf

Books are a great way to learn about new things. Whether it’s fiction that shows us a new culture, a chapter book that helps us understand new emotions, or nonfiction that shares interesting facts about nature, there’s always something new to learn in every book we pick up! This week’s Butler Bookshelf is a list of new books we’ve received that all have something to teach us about, like What’s the Actually Factually Difference?: How to Tell the Difference Between Over 150 Things That Are Similar But Different! by Jane Wilsher and illustrated by Liz Kay. This fun book is rich with knowldge and full of facts about all kinds of things that seem the same, but are actually different. Wilsher divides the book into many different chapters. including “Transportation,” “Jobs and hobbies,” and “History,” so readers have a wide range of topics to learn about. Kay’s illustrations accompany the text well and engage readers by helping to visualize every topic. A useful resource that can be read alone, What’s the Actually Factually Difference? can also be used to play fun trivia and quiz games with friends by taking turns reading and guessing the differences between things like a crocodile and an alligator or a black hole and a wormhole.

Check out more books below!

A Burning in the Bones (Waxways 3)
Written by Scott Reintgen
Published by Margaret K. McElderry Books
Available now

Charlie Hernandez and the Phantom of Time (Charlie Hernandez 4)
Written by Ryan Calejo
Published by Aladdin
Available now

Nature School: Planet Earth: Lessons and Activities to Inspire Children’s Fascination with Our Planet
Written by Lauren Giordano and Laura Stroup
Illustrated by Staphanie Hathaway
Published by Quarry Books
Available now

Sona Sharma, Wish Me Luck (Hardcover Edition)
Written by Chitra Soundar
Illustrated by Jen Khatun
Published by Candlewick Press
Available now

What’s the Actually Factually Difference? How to Tell the Difference Between Over 150 Things That Are Similar But Different!
Written by Jane Wilsher
Illustrated by Liz Kay
Published by words & pictures
Available now

At Home or On the Road: Connect w/ BCLC this Spring

The Butler Center space and staff have lots of plans this semester, and we hope you’ll join us!

Illinois Youth Services Institute

The Butler Center is a proud sponsor of IYSI 2025 taking place in Bloomington-Normal, February 27-28th. While registration is closed, I’m sure many of our IL library friends will be there. Look for the BCLC booth during exhibit hall hours:

  • Thursday, February 27 from 6:30 – 8:30 p.m. at the Sponsor Exhibit Reception
  • Friday, February 28 from 8:00 – 9:00 a.m. at the Sponsor Exhibits Coffee
  • Friday, February 28 from 9:00 – 1:00 pm during the concurrent exhibits hours

Or you’ll likely find me in the following sessions:

  • Once Upon a Time Again: Finding New Narratives in Old Tales with Dr. Janice Del Negro
    • Thursday, February 27 from 2-3pm in Redbird B
    • Award-winning author, educator, and storyteller Janice M. Del Negro will briefly discuss the place of fairy tales in youth literature as well as the process of retelling tales, including a storytelling demonstration of classic tales retold. Workshop includes demonstrations, discussion, language games, and exercises on retelling tales and changing points of view. Includes resource handouts.
  • Strengthening the Library Ecosystem
    • Thursday, February 27 from 3:15 PM – 4:15 PM in Redbird G
    • Our panel presentation will have a focus on the importance of forging partnerships between public and school libraries as a foundation for literacy efforts. This session aims to equip youth services professionals with innovative strategies for enhancing engagement and promoting literacy through collaborative programming across different types of libraries and organization and system engagement. RAILS, IHLS, and AISLE members will share best practices, strategies for networking with library groups and organizations, and an update of resources and information. We will also cover various entry points into schools and cross-type library programming. This session will focus on strengthening the partnership between school and public libraries for the benefit of all with support from various stakeholders.

Annual Butler Lecture

Can’t make it to IYSI? Join the Butler Center as we host award-winning author (and our OPRF neighbor) Candace Fleming at the 13th Annual Butler Lecture. In “Searching the World for Stories,” she discusses the “extreme research” involved in creating her nonfiction (and fiction) books. Learning hieroglyphs? Nursing orphaned rhino babies? It’s part of the job.

Candace Fleming is the author of more than fifty books for children and young adults, including the 2021 Sibert Medal-winning Honeybee: The Busy Life of Apis Mellifera, as well as the 2021 YALSA Excellence in Nonfiction Award-winning The Rise and Fall of Charles Lindbergh. A recipient of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, she is also the two-time winner of both the Boston Globe/Horn Book Award, and the Sibert Honor. Her most recent titles are The Enigma Girls and Narwhal, Unicorn of the Arctic. Find out more about the author an her work at CandaceFleming.com

The lecture will be followed by a Q&A, reception, and book signing.
Register today!


Spring Break

Classes may be suspended for DU-SOIS students to get some well-earned R&R (March 3-7), but if you’re staying local, you can still check in with BCLC Tuesday-Thursday from 9-3pm or Monday and Friday from 2-5pm. Or drop a note to butler@dom.edu to make special arrangements.


Bologna Children’s Book Fair

BCLC curator, Jen Clemons, is off the Italy with LIS youth services students for the Bologna Children’s Book Fair. Watch for updates to our socials in early April for a peek at some of the sights, sounds, and tastes Bologna has to offer. Want to join in 2026? LIS 796: International Book Fair is open to SOIS students and Students-at-Large. Contact us at butler@dom.edu to find out more.


Butler Youth Services Scholarship

Applications are being accepted for the Butler Youth Services Scholarship. This $15,000 scholarship will be awarded to a student seeking to earn a Dominican University MLIS with a focus on children’s services for public or school libraries. Preference will be given to graduates of a Dominican University undergraduate program who are from a background underrepresented in the field of library science. This competitive award will consider merit, academic excellence, leadership qualities, and the desire and disposition to work with young people as part of the applicant selection process.

Applications are due May 5, 2025 for Fall 2025 award. Visit DOM.EDU to find out more.  

Butler Bookshelf

If there’s one things books do best, it’s transport us somewhere new. With the power of fiction, we can travel to new places, full of new people, and experience things we never thought possible. This week, we’re taking a look a teen fiction that takes us someplace new – from a fairytale kingdom to an alien invasion to a virus-ridden dystopia, each of these books takes the reader totally out of this world. Our feature is Why On Earth: An Alien Invasion Anthology, edited by Rosiee Thor and Vania Stoyanova. Iona is on a mission. Her brother, Axariam has been stuck on Earth for five years – all the while pretending to be “Max Spencer,” a boyband superstar turned Hollywood actor. But when Iona’s ship crashes and her crew is shattered, their mission (and the premiere of Max’s new movie) devolves into chaos. An innovative approach to the anthology format, each short story in this collection gives a unique perspective on the “alien invasion” as Iona and her crew attempt to reunite and rescue Max once and for all. Delightfully quirky and filled to the brim with loveable characters, this anthology is a must-read for sci-fi lovers everywhere.

Check out more teen genre fiction below!

All Better Now
Neal Shusterman
Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing /Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
Available now!

Capitana
Casandra James
HarperCollins Publishers/Quill Tree Books
Available now!

Liar’s Kingdom
Christine Calella
Page Street Publishing/Page Street YA
Available now!

Orisha, Volume 1
Huzayfa Umar
The Quarto Group/Rockport Publishers
Available February 25th, 2025

Why On Earth: An Alien Invasion Anthology
Edited by Rosiee Thor and Vania Stoyanova
Page Street Publishing
Available now!

Not So Scary: A Review of Don’t Squish a Slug

Don’t Squish a Slug: A Wonderful Celebration of Marvellous Minibeasts!
Yussef Rafik
Illustrated by Riley Samels
The Quarto Group/words & pictures
Ages 7-10
Available February 18, 2025

Have you ever wondered what the world’s biggest insect is? Do you want to know why slugs produce slime? Are you ready to learn how to decode a honeybee’s “waggle dance?” If you’re curious about bugs, then this is the book for you! Don’t Squish a Slug: A Wonderful Celebration of Marvelous Minibeasts is a look into the big world of the smallest creatures on Earth. From camouflage champions to poisonous pros, Rafik explores some of the most amazing and interesting bugs out there, and explains what makes each one of them special and important.

More than just a book of bug facts, Don’t Squish a Slug is about caring for even the smallest of creatures. “It’s really important that we have empathy for bugs,” the introduction to the book says, “We should appreciate what they do for our planet an learn to love living alongside them” (5). To that end, each entry includes mentions of how each bug is useful to humans and our environment. Particularly scary or off-putting entries, such as the horrifyingly named tongue-eating louse, are partnered with reassurances that they pose no threat to the average human. Samels’ colorful full-page illustrations are accurate while remaining stylized and not overly-detailed, and even classic creepy-crawlies like spiders and millipedes manage to be represented without looking unsettling or upsetting to the most squeamish of readers. By combining fascinating facts with reminders of the helpfulness and importance of these “minibeasts,” Rafik’s book is sure to foster a love (or at least a tolerant understanding) of insects in readers.

With enjoyable illustrations and exciting information, this book is sure to please bug-lovers, while also inspiring curiosity in those less fond of them. Regardless of their opinion going in, any child is sure to finish Don’t Squish a Slug with newfound knowledge and appreciation for these teeny-tiny creatures.

Butler Bookshelf

It’s February, which means Black History month is being celebrated across the United States. The Butler Center is proud to feature Black voices and Black literature across our collections, including the Effie Lee Morris Collection of African American Books. This week, we’d like to celebrate the month by taking a look at fiction by Black authors in our new book collection. From picture books to middle grade to young adult, these books span ages and genres, giving a peek at all corners of our collection! Our feature pick is Saturday Morning at the ‘Shop by Keenan Jones and illustrated by Ken Daley. Inspired by the author’s frequent trips to barbershops as a child, this colorful picture book follows a young boy as he spends his Saturday morning in a bustling barbershop. Along the way, he celebrates all the things a barbershop can be: a sound booth, a comedy club, a classroom, and more. With gorgeous full-page illustrations that capture the hustle and bustle of the ‘shop, this is a delightful book for readers of all ages.

Check out more fiction from Black authors below!

As You Wish
Nashae Jones
Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing/Aladdin
Available now!

Black Joy
Charnaie Gordon
Illustrated by Lhaiza Morena
The Quarto Group/becker&myer!kids
Available now!

Dear Black Boy
Martellus Bennett
The Quarto Group/Frances Lincoln Children’s Books
Available now!

Saturday Morning at the ‘Shop
Keenan Jones
Illustrated by Ken Daley
Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing/Beach Lane Books
Available now!

(S)kin
Ibi Zoboi
HarperCollins Publishers/Versify
Available now!

Where She Started: A Review of Janie Writes a Play 

Janie Writes a Play: Jane Yolen’s First Great Story 
Written by Heidi E. Y. Stemple 
Illustrated by Madelyn Goodnight 
Published by Charlesbridge 
Ages 5-8 
Available February 11, 2025 

Janie loves great stories of all forms. Constantly creating stories in her head, she loves writing down her ideas. With rehearsals about to start for her class play, Janie can’t wait to learn the story and get her part. Unfortunately, when she reads the script, she’s disappointed by its lack of a “rising plot or big moment” (p. 21), and she finds the ending unsatisfying. Later, in ballet class, Janie is disheartened by the lackluster story, but the satisfying ending of her class’s dance routine inspires her to write her own script. After a long night of writing and rewriting, Janie turns in her story to her teacher, Mrs. Jiler. She agrees to use the new play and hands out new roles. In the end, the success of her play inspires Janie to keep writing and ultimately become the beloved children’s author, Jane Yolen. 

In this imaginative picture book, Heidi E. Y. Stemple, Jane Yolen’s daughter, pays loving tribute to the story of her mother’s first story. Writing about young Janie’s constantly soaring imagination, Stemple shows an appreciation for Yolen’s artistry in a manner that encourages readers to foster their own creativity. Stemple shares some insight into Yolen’s creative process, like how she would learn new words by reading books that were above her reading level. At the end, Stemple includes a brief passage about her mother’s life and work, as well as photographs of Yolen and her family growing up. Madelyn Goodnight’s bright, full-color illustrations bring whimsy to Janie’s world by showcasing her strong imagination. One side of a spread shows a regular scene at the park, with people picnicking and flying kites. On the opposite side, Goodnight illustrates what Janie sees: swashbuckling pirates and tutu-clad dinosaurs throwing tantrums. Many of the illustrations are touching references to Yolen’s large body of work. Janie Writes a Play is a delightfully fun story that encourages creativity and curiosity and serves as an amusing resource for information on a beloved children’s author that can aid in a lesson about storytelling or a program featuring Yolen’s books. 

Butler Bookshelf

This week’s Butler Bookshelf is all about new fiction titles in our collection! These titles feature animal adventures, a school for time travelers, and dragons in London for readers of all ages. The featured title this week is Time Out! (Addy McBean) by Margery Cuyler and illustrated by Stacy Curtis. In this chapter book for beginning readers, math-loving Addy McBean learns how to tell time on analog clocks and how to set an alarm. Along the way, she and her best friend, Star, become convinced that their teacher, Mr. Vertex, is getting married. Working tirelessly to look for clues, they accidentally spread the rumor to their class. In addition to learning the fun of telling time, Addy learns the importance of using facts to make a decision instead of assumptions. Curtis uses quirky digital illustrations to accompany Addy’s adventures, and Cuyler includes a character glossary and a word list to help young readers remember characters and learn new terms.

Check out more fiction below!

The Doomsday Vault (Everwhen School of Time Travel (and Other Odd Sciences) 1)
Written by Thomas Wheeler
Published by Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
Available now

A Language of Dragons
Written by S.F. Williamson
Published by Harper
Available now

Little Head, Little Nose
Written by Yuli Yav
Illustrated by Antonia Woodward
Published by LITTLE SIMON
Available now

Time Out! (Addy McBean)
Written by Margery Cuyler
Illustrated by Stacy Curtis
Published by Aladdin Quix
Available now

A Wolf Called Fire
Written by Rosanne Parry
Published by Greenwillow Books
Available now

To Hug or Not to Hug: A review of Hugs Are (Not) for Everybody!

Hugs Are (Not) for Everybody!
Ella Russell
Illustrated by Udayana Lugo
Owlkids Books
March 18, 2025
Age 3-7

At a magic birthday party full of both cuddlers and the squeeze-averse, an enthusiastic young guest learns that not everyone is comfortable with hugs in the same way. Hugs are for hello and goodbye. Hugs are for celebrations and congratulations. Though hugs are not always welcome. Some prefer a wave, a high five, or a bum-shaking secret handshake. As the party continues, she learns that all she has to do is ask to make everyone feel safe.

Russell gently explores boundaries and respect in this sweet and simple picture book for pre-school to early elementary years that reunites the cast from Pink is For Everybody! She centers themes of consent and body autonomy in a comfortably familiar setting, with characters in non-threatening scenarios, like arriving at a friend’s home and wishing happy birthday. Lugo amplifies the theme of individual preferences with a cast of diverse backgrounds and personalities, and a variety of layout styles showcasing different types of engagement. Her engaging watercolors, candy-hued palette, and expressive faces capture both the joy of the party and the anxiety of some partygoers. Instances of onomatopoeia and clearly delineated dialog lend themselves to exuberant storytime inclusion and will make the shiest kids feel seen.

A wholesome tale of consent that makes introducing this often sensitive topic a piece of (birthday) cake.

Butler Bookshelf

This week’s Butler Bookshelf is all about nonfiction – from animals to athletes and artists, these books provide a fascinating glimpse into the world around us. This week we’re featuring Nature: Fascinating Facts You Never Knew About the Natural World by Eric Huang. Think you know everything there is to know about nature? Oh no you don’t! Huang corrects commonly-held misconceptions about the natural world, while providing extra interesting facts along the way. Complete with full-color illustrations from Sam Caldwell, this book is perfect for any budding eco-enthusiast

Check out more selections from the Butler Center’s nonfiction collection below!

David Beckham (Little People, BIG DREAMS)
Maria Isabel Sanchez Vegara
Illustrated by Fernando Martin
The Quarto Group/Frances Lincoln Children’s Books
Available now!

Maya Angelou Finds Her Voice
Connie and Peter Roop
Illustrated by Noa Denmon
Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing/Aladdin
Available now!

Mud to the Rescue!: How Animals Use Mud to Thrive and Survive
Tanya Konerman
Illustrated by Melanie Cataldo
Web of Life Children’s Books
Available May 20th, 2025

Nature: Fascinating Faces You Never Knew About the Natural World
Eric Huang
Illustrated by Sam Caldwell
The Quarto Group/Words & Pictures
Available now!

Yayoi Kusama (Little People, BIG DREAMS)
Maria Isabel Sanchez Vegara
Illustrated by Ryoko Ichikawa
The Quarto Group/Frances Lincoln Children’s Books
Available April 4th, 2025