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Scott Magoon

Author of The Boy Who Cried Bigfoot!

9+ Works 796 Members 31 Reviews

About the Author

Scott Magoon has illustrated numerous children's books including Spoon by Amy Rosenthal Krouse; Ugly Fish by Kara LaReau; Hugo and Miles in I've Painted Everything, and The Luck of the Loch Ness Monster: A Tale of Picky Eating, by A.W. Flaherty. (Bowker Author Biography)

Includes the name: by Scott Magoon

Series

Works by Scott Magoon

The Boy Who Cried Bigfoot! (2013) 374 copies, 8 reviews
Breathe (2014) 179 copies, 7 reviews
Linus The Little Yellow Pencil (2019) 109 copies, 4 reviews
Hugo and Miles In I've Painted Everything (2007) 48 copies, 7 reviews
Mystery Ride! (2008) 22 copies, 1 review

Associated Works

Spoon (2009) — Illustrator — 1,080 copies, 37 reviews
Rescue and Jessica: A Life-Changing Friendship (2018) — Illustrator — 490 copies, 48 reviews
Never Smile at a Monkey: And 17 Other Important Things to Remember (2009) — Cover designer, some editions — 486 copies, 34 reviews
Misunderstood Shark: Friends Don't Eat Friends (2019) — Illustrator — 446 copies, 3 reviews
Misunderstood Shark (2018) — Illustrator — 442 copies, 7 reviews
Chopsticks (2012) — Illustrator — 379 copies, 30 reviews
The Nuts: Sing and Dance in Your Polka-Dot Pants (2015) — Illustrator — 314 copies, 1 review
Ugly Fish (2006) — Illustrator — 200 copies, 17 reviews
The Luck of the Loch Ness Monster: A Tale of Picky Eating (2007) — Illustrator — 190 copies, 7 reviews
The Nuts: Bedtime at the Nut House (2014) — Illustrator — 144 copies
I Will Not Eat You (2016) — Illustrator — 106 copies, 5 reviews
I Have a Balloon (2017) — Illustrator — 89 copies, 2 reviews
The Nuts: Keep Rolling! (2017) — Illustrator — 85 copies, 2 reviews
Mr. Prickles: A Quill-Fated Love Story (2011) — Illustrator — 59 copies, 6 reviews
Where Is My Balloon? (2019) — Illustrator — 40 copies, 3 reviews
If Waffles Were Like Boys (2011) — Illustrator — 37 copies, 4 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
male

Members

Reviews

34 reviews
I don’t know how to describe this. I love how seriously the story takes itself with cartoony extinct animals.

Lug, the wooly mammoth, has survivor’s guilt and even legal issues when an arsonist triggers a traumatic memory. I enjoyed his narrative and arc, not wanting to be exploited in the zoo system but also wanting to keep his hands busy.

Also, I’m always immediately intrigued when an antagonist says they want to burn the world.
The art style even has a kind of grittiness to it. The show more fighting of forest fires was informative. I had no clue you really can fight fire with fire.

SN: I’m not a Spanish language buff, but I’m tired that the frog’s Spanish never has accent marks. Si and Sí are two different things
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Linus the little yellow pencil and his eraser Ernie find themselves in conflict in this lighthearted picture-book examination of the artistic process. Everything Linus draws, Ernie erases. How will they ever create something for the family art show?! Then Linus meets a mysterious creature called Smudge, and discovers that he and Ernie can work together to create magical images full of shadow and depth...

Although I have read any number of picture-books illustrated by Scott Magoon, Linus the show more Little Yellow Pencil is the first I have picked up that he wrote as well. The story here reminded me of Max Amato's Perfect, which also features a conflict between a pencil and eraser who eventually learn to work together to create great art. I found Magoon's narrative engaging, and his artwork quite appealing. There's a frenetic feeling, visually speaking, to some of the pages that works very well with the story. Recommended to young would-be artists who need a little encouragement to experiment, and play around with different methods. show less
There is a sort of weird conjoined twins thing going on here, with Linus actually being the pencil tip and the other end of him being a contrary and mean eraser named Ernie. They fight a lot. Then Linus enters a pencil sharpener and things get downright bizarre and eerie. The more I think about this book, the more creeped out I get. Brr.
Lug, Martie, Quito, and Scratch are a team of "rare" (extinct) animals working for Dr. Z to - they think - protect nature. But when a trip to Siberia reveals that Dr. Z only wants the Siberian unicorn horn for his own gain and power, and that he's been misinforming the team all along, they turn on him and team up with Ursa, escaping with the horn (and its magical healing properties). Full of advanced technology, scenes of action and danger, and a big revelation, this is an exciting middle show more grade series starter with a focus on environmental protection and climate change.

There is a lot of back matter, including an "extinctionary" (a fact sheet on all the extinct animals in the book, including saber-tooth tigers, passenger pigeons, woolly mammoths, Collins' poison frogs, cave bears, and more), a glossary, more about the Batagaika Crater, ways to protect the environment, instructions for the quick-freeze trick, further reading, and a bibliography.

Quotes

"Big picture, people. Earth's natural habitats are in trouble. We've each got a chance to make a positive difference. The world needs all creatures to work together. Nature needs her heroes." (Quito the Collins' poison frog, 17)

"Friends show their love in times of trouble, not in happiness." (Nadia, citing an old Russian saying, 41)

"Your idealistic foster father led you to believe you had a choice in your destiny. But you do not." (Dr. Z to Scratch, 111)

"Each of us is the last of our kind. But our family is the first of its kind. Here's to us - the Extincts! Answering nature's call together."
"OMG. Worst. Slogan. Ever." (Scratch and Martie, 138)
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Statistics

Works
9
Also by
16
Members
796
Popularity
#32,018
Rating
4.0
Reviews
31
ISBNs
35
Languages
1

Charts & Graphs