Children will love to study the pages and will often stop to point out details such as Eloise's turtle, which is about to bite another café patron's toes. In black and white and hues of red with bits of blue, the illustrations capture many marvelous expressions. Rather than budgeting one picture per page, illustrator Hilary Knight intersperses many images of Eloise among the text. Parents in particular will appreciate how well Kay Thompson captures every French foible, from traffic to fashion to sidewalk cafés. With the same zeal with which she explored the Plaza, Eloise now takes on all of Paris. Who can resist saying "regardez" and "parapluie"? In this second book about Eloise, there is no gradual introduction to Eloise's helter-skelter pace: The cablegram arrives, and Eloise runs nonstop from that moment on through every new experience. "Pas de quoi d'accord and zut," says Eloise as she and Nanny embrace life in Paris even if parents stumble over the French, Eloise's adoption of foreign words just for the sounds is contagious.
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