Now while on a nostalgic and personal level Mo Willems' Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Tale sure does resonate (for I too once misplaced a treasured plush rabbit as a toddler), I really do not all that much like the accompanying illustrations. As sorry, but I have always been rather easily creeped out by especially cartoon-like images and little Trixie with her overly large and bulging eyes really does almost give me the proverbial willies so to speak (and therefore, while I can appreciate Mo Willems' ingenuity and do like the combination of pictures and black and white Brooklyn photographs, I just do not enjoy the exaggerated caricature renderings all that much on a personal artistic tastes and aesthetic level). But regarding the story, the presented narrative of Snuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Tale, I in fact can and do totally and untterly identify with young Trixie's non verbal frustration, with the fact that she is trying so hard to make herself be understood (that Knuffle Bunny has been left at the laundromat) and that her father annoyingly and infuriatingly simply does not GET it, that he never does even notice Knuffle Bunny is missing. And while some readers might well and indeed be annoyed at and frustrated with Trixie's tantrums and emotional outbursts, I for one feel much more frustration with the father for continuously failing to notice the reason for his young daughter's outrageous behavior. For in many if not most ways, the father really is just so utterly clueless and on an entirely personal level, I find it both sad and a bit angering that it takes repeated and frustrated almost violent outbursts of emotionality until the mother (and even then, still not the father) realises that Trixie's toy, that her Knuffle Bunny has been left at the laundromat (Trixie might be preverbal, but since her Knuffle Bunny is almost like a permanent attachment to her and for her, in my opinion, the father should have realised what is wrong if not immediately, then at least soon). Three stars (but with less cartoony and exaggerated illustrations, I probably would be rating Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Tale with four stars).