"With Dorothy Kunhardt, words come to the fore, words running on and piling up and repeating themselves, stopping only to put a question–WRONG! then rushing on again until the listener, on tenterhooks, can stand it no longer." –Barbara Bader, American Picturebooks from Noah's Ark to The Beast Within
"For Dorothy Kunhardt a children's book was nothing more or less than a way to talk to children. And if along the way the pages of the book had to float in a bath, had to squeak, had to bounce, had to light up, had to change color, had to feel furry or be in the shape of a snake or an elephant for feeling under the covers, if the book had to have a lock on it, a hole through it, a smell all its own, even if the book had to be eaten, that was O.K.–because that was all part of the delight." –The New York Times