Author, singer, songwriter, and musician, Mifflin Lowe has had six books published, which have sold over 300,000 copies in 4 languages. His books include a children's poetry book, Beasts By The Bunches (Doubleday) and three humor books for adults: The Cheapskate's Handbook, I Hate Fun and How To Be A Celebrity (Price/Stern/Sloan.) He has also performed his music for family audiences from New England to New Orelans presenting works from his children's CDs: The King Who Forgot His Underpants, Cowboy Kareem, Wilton Wilberry's Magical Holiday Wishing Well, Cat Tales, and Beasts By The Bunches (Caedmon/Harper& Row;) and has sung an orchestral version of ""Beasts by The Bunches,"" with the Syracuse Symphony Orchestra, and Missouri Symphony under the direction of Maestro Kirk Trevor. Recently, his animated film script, The Adventures of Cowboy Kareem won the blue ribbon prize in the Sarasota Film Office TV/ME competition beating out over 800 entrants from 28 states.,In the world of dance, Mifflin's work has been used by the Island Moving Company of Newport, RI in presentations of ""Beasts by The Bunches"" and ""Cowboy Kareem."" The West Hartford Youth Ballet under the direction of Bette Ann Libin has also presented Mr. Lowe's works, including Beasts By The Bunches, a dance from Lowe's song, ""I Spit Out My Food"" for the ""Ted Hershey Dance Marathon"". This June, the West Hartford Youth Ballet will present a dance performance featuring Miss Libin's original choreography with the music and story of Lowe's rock opera, ""The King Who Forgot His Underpants.""Albert Pinilla is a freelance illustrator based between Barcelona and Finland. He has worked for many publishers and companies including Editorial Casals, Editorial Sàpiens, Diset S.A, Goula, Editorial San Pablo, Descobrir magazine, Namaka Magazine, Editorial Mi Cuento, P/A/N magazine, Capçalera magazine from the Association of Catalan Journalists, Davos Comunicación S.L, La Agencia de Publicidad S.A (Spain), Hannacroix Creek Books, Bookworks, Highlights Magazine (USA), Petit Dimoni Magazine (France), Headu Giochi (Italy), Igloo Books (United Kingdom), Schildts & Söderstrströms (Finland) and Akotek (Norway).
A child enumerates all the ways Dad is a superhero in his own right. This dad clearly has an imagination to match his child's. Last week, the kiddo was getting squeezed by a python, the double-page spread depicting a jungle scene with Dad using a vine to swing across to rescue his child from a menacing (and gigantic) snake. This gives way with the page turn to a single page revealing the child tangled in a green garden hose, Dad armed with a garden spade, and Mom, unimpressed, holding the hose where, presumably, Dad has sliced it with a trowel in the rescue effort. This sets the pattern, Dad imagining things with his children and Mom injecting a bit of reality, especially when his humoring of the children goes a little too far (""spaghetti with MM's, chocolate sauce, and...potato chips,"" anyone?). This father seems to know just how to make everything right in his children's lives, from serving up ice cream to the losing baseball team and getting a matching terrible haircut to finding his daughter's lost doll. Torrent's illustrations of the redheaded White family play up body language and facial expressions so readers feel like they are there with them in each situation, no matter how outlandish. And their reactions to each other are priceless (kisses? Ewww!). Like this child, readers will want to be like this dad: able to dream big and accomplish anything.(Picture book. 4-8) --Kirkus Reviews, Kirkus PreS-Gr 1-What legendary being can take on Sasquatch, Thor, and a mighty python and still survive? Dad, of course. Torrent brilliantly illustrates this larger-than-life, near-mythical being. Lowe's narrative celebrates all of Dad's feats--from the extraordinary fight with a python to the seemingly mundane task of bedtime snuggles. Mom is not forgotten but rather central as well in her role of sending Dad off to the hardware store and delivering the kisses that make every young boy cringe. Dad can cook the most spectacular meal of spaghetti and MM sauce while sleuthing like Sherlock Holmes to find an essential lost toy. Dad even makes the worst of haircuts become trendsetters. Dad is spectacular in just being Dad. The book concludes with the perfect coda: encouraging children to write about what makes their Dad a legend. VERDICT A definite must-have for Father's Day celebrations and displays. --Heather Maneiro, Glenn Elem. Sch., Durham, NC, School Library Journal This creative romp by Lowe follows a father with an apparently boundless capacity for fun, his more levelheaded wife, and their two children, the older of whom can't stop singing their father's praises. Mom provides comedic counterbalance to Dad's exuberant exploits, often revealing what the art does not: ""Once, he blasted us off into space! We went so high and so fast, he said we went where no kids have gone before,"" reads one page, portraying the dad and kids suited up as astronauts. ""Mom said if he pushes the swings that hard again, she'll send him where no one has gone before,"" the bottom of the page finishes. Torrent illustrates in a sketch-like style, richly colored and replete with dynamic illustrations of the white family. A rollicking celebration of one father's imagination. Back matter includes a fill-in list for the reader's own father. Ages 4-8. --Publishers Weekly, Publishers Weekly