Friday, November 21, 2025

Hoglets' Great Egg Hunt ~ Children's Book Review

 
HOGLETS' GREAT EGG HUNT
Hoglets, Prickles and Primrose Series, Book Three
by Lynette Creswell
illustrated by Doriano Strologo

Illustrated Children's Book / Early Reader / Holidays
Publisher: White Rabbit Books
Publication Date: November 4, 2025
Pages: 32 pages

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ABOUT THE BOOK: The eggs are ready, but the Easter Bunny’s sick.

When the Easter Bunny catches a cold, the Egg Hunt is in jeopardy. Determined to save the day, two brave hoglets, Prickles and Primrose, team up with their friend Rosie Rabbit on a race against the clock to decorate and hide the eggs.

With mischievous Freddie Fox up to his old tricks and a secret helper working behind the scenes, surprises await at every turn.

Can Prickles and Primrose save the hunt?

Through teamwork, kindness, and a sprinkle of wonder, the friends embark on an unforgettable adventure, ensuring the hunt remains as special as ever.

A delightful tale in the spirit of Peter Rabbit and The Gruffalo.

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BOOK REVIEW
I don't spend time on plot summary, so please read the book synopsis above.

Hall Ways Review: Hoglets’ Great Egg Hunt is the third book in the new-to-me Hoglets, Prickles and Primrose series by UK author Lynette Creswell. Children love stories with familiar characters and going on new adventures with them via books, but even kids unfamiliar with the series won’t struggle due to the helpful page at the start that shows the main animal characters of the Briar Woods.

The illustrations found in Hoglets’ Great Egg Hunt are colorful and bright, and expressions on character faces are easy to identify. Doriano Strologo’s attention to small details, like rabbit paw prints tracked across the pages and texture across flowers, makes each page-turn engaging for young readers. I appreciate that the graphics are created by a human, so children can see rough edges and textures not found in AI generated versions. 

The format alternates full pages of text with plenty of white space and adorable embellishments, with full-page illustrations.  It leans towards being an early chapter book, so I recommend this book as a read-aloud for kids under six and a read-along for newly-independent readers.  My review copy is digital, but as always, I believe children’s books are at their best in a format that allows for turning and touching real pages and doesn’t require charging. The additional activity for readers to find the hidden egg on each page adds more appeal (and further builds the case for reading on paper; excited fingers touching eReaders tends to have consequences).

Hoglets’ Great Egg Hunt is well-written, with a perfect mix of on-level and stretch words, and it’s gloriously error free. Beyond the pure pleasure of the story, it could be fun to discuss the small differences between American and UK writing and culture highlighting, for example, cozy versus cosy, color versus colour, mom versus mum, hard-boiled versus raw eggs for dyeing, and even “blimey” as a fun exclamation.

This Mimi is now a fan and can’t wait to share Hoglets’ Great Egg Hunt with my granddaughters. But first, since we’re approaching the holidays, I will be going back to the series starter, Hoglets’ Christmas Magic, which also has an audiobook version with a narrator who has a delightful cross-the-pond accent.

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Learn more about author Lynette E. Creswell

and her diverse catalog of books:

Website *** Goodreads *** X *** Facebook

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2 comments:

  1. Cute! And fun to see there is a Christmas story as well. Great gift giving idea.

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    Replies
    1. I am anticipating the other two books are just as fun, and I definitely think getting any or all three books would make a great gift. Print copies, all the way!

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