Hap-Pea Easter

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Author(s)
Genre(s)
Age Range
2+
Release Date
February 04, 2025
ISBN
978-1665940245
Buy This Book
      
Keith Baker’s New York Times bestselling peas have some Easter fun in this picture book filled with eggs, chicks, candies, bunnies, and more!

Hap-pea Easter! Hap-pea Spring! What surprises will it bring?

From sprouting flowers and gentle showers to eggs decorated every which way, there’s plenty of excitement to be had on Easter with the peas! And there might even be an appearance from everyone’s favorite bunny…

Editor review

1 review
An A-pea-ling Easter Title
(Updated: April 06, 2026)
Overall rating
 
4.0
Plot
 
4.0
Characters
 
4.0
Writing Style
 
4.0
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
4.0
Spring brings rain, flowers, and a variety of outdoor activities, but also a lot of excitement for Easter eggs. The exuberant peas from the LMNO Peas and 1-2-3 Peas (which has been branching out into Valentine's Day, with a Christmas book coming out in September 2025) are celebrating all things having to do with the tradition of dying eggs. It's messy but fun to dye and decorate them with a lot of colors and patterns, and then also to hide them. The peas cavort through their neighborhood, collecting their own tiny eggs along side the human size ones, and remain on the lookout for the Easter Bunny, who makes a brief appearance.
Good Points
It's fun to look at the tiny peas, and search for things that give them personalities. There are hats, hairstyles, and accessories to set them apart, and even one pea wearing rabbit ears who appears on each page spread, hiding Easter eggs. My favorite was the miniature chocolate bunny, complete with celophane wrapping and a bow, that appears at the foot of an Easter basket. This difference also allow the peas to be somewhat diverse; there's a wide range of ages and peas wearing glasses and in wheelchairs, but of course, all of the peas are green!

The digitally rendered illustrations are in pretty pastel colors, with lots of pink, blue, and purple, with a fair amount of green not only in the grass outside where the eggs are hidden, but in the plastic Easter grass in the baskets, which is particularly well drawn. The book is a smaller size (8" by 8"), which would make it the perfect background for some candy and small board book or set of pencils in an Easter basket.

I was surprised to learn that Sadler's It's Not Being a Bunny is often the best selling picture book around Easter time, because my children never considered that a holiday book. Hap-Pea Easter is a good title for celebrating a nonreligious Easter, along with John and Oswald's The Good Egg, Dewdney's Llama Llama Easter Egg, Underwood and Rueda's Here Comes the Easter Cat, and the fantastic Pick a Perfect Egg by Toht and Jarvis'. When talking about Easter books, it's important to mention that Hayward and Flack's The Country Bunny and the Little Gold Shoes, a 1939 title which is still in print, has excellent life lessons about hard work and perseverance!
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