by J. Steven Spires & Jonathan Caron, illustrator
Inspired Books Publishing 5/01/2013
978-0-9858469-0-9
Age 4 to 8 32 pages
.
“Three little shrimp are swimming with their troop . . . one adventurer, one follower and on worry wart. As their eyes fall upon the wonders around them, they suddenly get an idea. Two are ready to explore. The other is not so sure. There is only one problem. Unseen danger lurks in the water. What will they do?”
Opening
“One fine day three little shrimp went swimming.”
Review
Three shrimp were part of a group—a troop—of shrimp heading out to sea. Immediately, the three shrimp separated from the others, but it is unknown how that happened. In their lone adventures, they run into four dangerous situations, and four times, they came out of it unscathed, making them very lucky shrimp indeed. First, they swam near the shore and three egrets envision a pot of gumbo. Just in time, the three shrimp ducked into a hole, despite the third shrimp’s misgivings, and avoided the egrets. In the hole, they nibbled on worms.

On Their Own
The shrimp also narrowly avoided a huge fish looking for a snack and an extremely dangerous looking loggerhead turtle. Both times, the shrimp were saved by their hunger as they swam into sea grass and algae and ate “until their stomachs burst.” Finally, a fisherman wants the shrimp for bait. Luckily, the shrimp swam down, just out of reach of where the fisherman cast his net, to devour minnows into their ever-expanding stomachs.
The shrimp are of two distinct personalities. The first is a leader and the other two are followers, though the third is also a worrier that the other two ignore. The shrimps’ narrow escapes are just good old fashioned dumb luck, as none of them even saw the dangers they were in. Finding the rest of the group—the troop—was also luck, though that time they did have a goal in mind and worked toward the goal.

Egrets Threaten
The illustrations, tempered by the aqua-green sea and the greyish-brown prawn, tend to be dark,* yet realistic. The other animals add color to the spreads while the scenes above the sea fill the spread with wonderful hues of yellow and orange.There is a grainy textured effect to the illustrations, giving them a worn look.The eyes carry all emotion in the story. The egrets, the huge fish, and the loggerhead turtle have mean, dangerous eyes making them predators anything would be scared of . . . unless oblivious to their presence. The shrimp have bright, inquisitive eyes matching their curiosity and giving away their young, innocent, inexperienced age.
Most interesting is the illustrator, fifteen-year-old Jonathan Caron, a high school art-student. Two years later, at seventeen, Jonathan finished the picture book, the coloring, and other activity illustrations. It all helped Johnathan win a full scholarship to a German university, where he now studies architecture.

Loggerhead Turtle Threatens
If there is a message in this story it would be: for luck and safety, keep your mind on your stomach. No, Three Little Shrimp is simply a cute story for entertainment sake and nothing more and that’s okay. Not every story needs to contain a message to kids. Those interested in ocean life and animals will find this story most enjoyable. The simplistic nature of the story is best for younger children, age 4 to 6. Three Little Shrimp is both the author and illustrator’s debut children’s book and debut in the publishing world with Inspired Books Publishing.
*When printed, the spreads above look darker in the actual picture book.
THREE LITTLE SHRIMP. Text copyright © 2013 by J. Steven Spires. Illustrations copyright © 2013 by Jonathan Caron. Reproduced by permission of the publisher, Inspired Books Publishing, Slidell, LA.
Buy Three Little Shrimp at Amazon—Author’s Website—your local bookstore.
.
Meet the author, J. Steven Spires, at his website: http://jstevenspires.com/
Meet the illustrator, Jonathan Caron, the son of children’s book illustrator Romi Caron, who supervised her son’s at work.
Find other books at Inspired Books Publishing’s website:
.
.
A 15-year old did this? Dang. That kid has quite a future ahead of him.
LikeLike
Yep! Quite impressive. He wants to be an architect, but many fields have been left to write or illustrate children’s books, so there is hope he’ll return. Thanks for stopping by.
LikeLike
It is an underwater jungle out there! I love the sound of this book with such fun illustrations! Great review, Sue!
LikeLike
“Underwater jungle.” That’s great. I love that. I think I will edit my review and steal those two words. 🙂 I bet a pack of wild Lobos would love to read this. 🙂
LikeLike
It sounds very cute! 🙂
LikeLike
Cute–in a crawdad kind of way. No, it is cute. I suppose down south along coastal towns, Three Little Shrimp is a hit. The illustrator is amazing!
LikeLike
Sounds like a cute story. The illustrations are gorgeous! Imagine having that much talent at 15!
LikeLike
His mother has talent also. She is a children’s book illustrator and trained her son. But he wants to be an architect. Do they draw anything other than building plans? Yes, very talented. And it took him only two years–not overly long for a 32 page picture book.
LikeLike
First—love that cover! Colorful and expressive. That is one mean, hungry-looking fish! You automatically feel the shrimps’ peril! And then the egrets…and then the turtle! All of them so totally out to get the shrimp. You’re right—it’s all in the eyes! I also didn’t know that groups of shrimp are called “troops.” See? You really do learn something new every day 🙂 Thanks, Sue and J. Steven Spires 🙂
LikeLike
I had no idea about troops, other than maybe F-Troop. So I learned something, too. For shrimp they were kind of cute. I would be the third shrimp: “We need to go back; guys is this safe; no I don’t think we should go down that hole.” Then BAM! We’d all be eaten because of me. Ouch. I’m glad I’m not a shrimp. 🐱
LikeLike
OOooooh, I loved F-Troop! It was one of my FAvorite shows! As a teenager, I watched the reruns all the time! 😀 Thanks for walk down memory lane, Sue 🙂
LikeLike
Well, this looks pretty cute! I’ve eaten a shrimp. I’ve never seen a live shrimp. I have seen crawdads. Are they alike? I don’t know. Thanks for sharing and including the little video. That was nice.
LikeLike
Nope, crawdads and shrimp (also known as prawns) are not alike. For starters, crawdads have vicious little claws that snap at your fishing line and then at your when your try to take them off the line. I had a friend who liked to BBQ them, but it took A LOT to feed one person–but not me. If I see it moving, I cannot eat it. I can smoosh it, smash it, toss it back in the river, but not eat it. (And, no I don’t eat fish. They get tossed back in.)
I image crawdads are fun sport for you Rhythm. I knew a dog that thought they were great fun to yap at, though I don’t think the crawdads answered. The dog was never happy when he got too close. So maybe the crawdaddy did understand the yapping dog and answer him after all. I hope this never happens to you. 🙂
LikeLike
Whew! Me too! I’ve seen those crawdads in our river a couple of times and I just let them be. I can’t figure why anyone would want to eat them. They do have an interesting odor though.
LikeLike
I. Have, Never. Gotten. That. Close. But I bet they do. Might depend on the river.
LikeLike