Eloise in Paris
by Kay Thompson · Eloise #2
A breathless, voice-driven picture book that takes America's most unstoppable 6-year-old on a madcap trip to Paris.
The story
Eloise — the precocious resident of the Plaza Hotel — receives a cablegram and, in typical hurricane fashion, announces to the entire hotel staff that she's off to Paris. What follows is a rapid-fire torrent of travel preparations, absurd packing lists, hotel-department phone calls, a memorable vaccination scene, and a Parisian tour that takes her from haute couture houses to the Maxim's dining room. The pleasure is entirely in Eloise's singular voice and Hilary Knight's exquisite line-drawing world.
Age verdict
Best fit 6-9; a rich lap-read for 4-6 and a rewarding voice-craft study for 9-12.
Our take
kid-favored classic — voice and comedy drive the strong kid score; parent and teacher scores held back by light moral/thematic weight and dated classroom versatility
What stands out
Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.
Kids love
- Character voice Exceptional
Eloise's first-person voice is one of the most distinctive in 20th-century children's literature — run-ons without punctuation, made-up words ('zibbity zap,' 'sklathe'), 'rawther' delivered deadpan, French-English malapropism. Every sentence is unmistakably hers. Matches Junie B Jones (9) for voice singularity and approaches Wimpy Kid-tier recognition; the voice alone carries the book.
- First-chapter grab Strong
The opening salvo — 'If you are going to Paris France / this is me ELOISE' — drops readers straight into Eloise's breathless, first-person monologue with zero setup. The cablegram arrival and cascade of commands to Plaza staff (Ch. 1-4) establish voice and stakes instantly. Stronger than Junie B Jones (7, voice-driven but diary-style setup) but a shade short of Babymouse (8) because the hook rides almost entirely on voice without an immediate visual punchline.
Parents love
- Writing quality Exceptional
Kay Thompson's prose is master-class — distinctive run-on voice, controlled repetition, pattern-and-variation in the phone-call sequence (Ch. 4), rhythmic list-architecture in the packing chapter (Ch. 7). Every sentence is a craft choice. Close to the top tier among picture books in our database; writing-quality peer is literary-grade picture book prose, not flat genre output.
- Creative spark Strong
The book is a factory of creative prompts — the absurdist packing list (Ch. 7), the systematic hotel-department phone tree (Ch. 4), the 'turn into French' instructional parody (Ch. 3), the invented words, the pigeon-domesticity coda. Kids finish it wanting to write their own travel monologue. Strong creative fuel for the format.
Teachers love
- Read-aloud power Exceptional
Written as a performance text — rhythm, repetition, invented sound effects ('zibbity zap clink clank'), exclamations, run-on constructions designed for oral delivery. Ch. 4 phone calls beg for voice-variation per department. A teacher can ham up the French and Eloise's imperious delivery. Top-tier read-aloud for the picture-book shelf — performance is baked into the prose.
- Mentor text quality Strong
A masterclass in voice-driven narration and pattern-and-variation. The Ch. 4 phone sequence is a teachable lesson in using repetition with small differences for comedic and structural effect. The packing list (Ch. 7) models list-as-character-reveal. Writing teachers can draw specific craft moves from almost any spread. Strong mentor text for upper-elementary voice study.
✓ Perfect for
- • kids who love big personalities and first-person narrators
- • families planning a trip to Paris or introducing French culture
- • parents who want a read-aloud that rewards performance
- • graduates from simple readers ready for sustained voice-driven prose
- • fans of Ramona, Junie B Jones, and Fancy Nancy who want the original prototype
Not ideal for
Kids who need tight plot and clear emotional arcs — the story is loose and voice-driven; readers who prefer modern contemporary settings may find the 1950s hotel-and-servant world dated.
At a glance
- Pages
- 72
- Chapters
- 22
- Words
- 5k
- Difficulty
- Moderate
- POV
- First Person
- Illustration
- Fully Illustrated
- Published
- 1957
- Publisher
- Simon & Schuster
- Illustrator
- Hilary Knight
- ISBN
- 9780689827044
Mood & style
You'll know it worked when…
Kids who adore Ramona, Fancy Nancy, or Junie B Jones will finish this one in a single sitting and ask for the next Eloise book immediately.
If your kid loved "Eloise in Paris"
Matched across 30 dimensions — interest hooks, character appeal, tone, pacing, emotional core. Not by what other people bought. By what fits the same reader profile.
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