(Paperback)
What do a baby blue jay, a kitten, a girl, and a baby squirrel have in common?
They are emphatically curious about the world.
They find it difficult to leave the place where they feel safest.
And, eventually, they must all spread their wings and fly.
With his ever-inventive art, Caldecott winner Mordicai Gerstein stretches the boundaries of the traditional picture book, here using speech balloons to show all the characters talking at the same time and energetic pen-and-watercolor illustrations in this celebration of growing up.
Four stories about a baby bluejay, kitten, girl and baby squirrel converge in this picture-book drama. Readers follow the connected story threads via cartoon-like thought balloons to make sense out of the resulting mayhem. Initially, the characters often speak to themselves rather than to each other, and the short soliloquies can make for a rather disjointed plot, as if one were listening to four radio stations at the same time. In Gerstein's light-filled, full-spread illustrations, the speech bubbles also carry the story's narrative. Thus, several squirrels awkwardly share one bubble with a text that says, " 'What a silly kitten!' laugh all the squirrels," and the entire cast shares one that reads, " 'Baby Jay is flying!' shouts everyone." Gerstein (The Man Who Walked Between the Towers) cleverly includes characters who have reached different stages of "leaving the nest." Baby Squirrel is just old enough to watch the action but not to join in, and the curious kitten doesn't even know what "outside" means. The girl has left the nest but sometimes needs her mother's help, and the bluejay is too terrified to fly at first. At times the plot grows so complicated that 12 speech bubbles appear on a single spread. The format may be too confusing for novice readers, but the unfolding drama will likely hold readers' interest. Ages 3-6. (Mar.) Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsMordicai Gerstein was already a talented children’s book illustrator when he decided to start writing children’s books of his own. Since then, he has released dozens of titles and has won nearly as many awards for his stories of childhood innocence, spiritual exploration, and imagination gone wild. His biographical story of tightrope walker Philippe Petit won the 2004 Caldecott Medal, making The Man Who Walked Between the Towers the most distinguished American picture book for children in 2004.
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