Continuing with the seasonal theme, Stead teams up with first-time picture book author Julie Fogliano for a gentle look at one little bespectacled boy and his garden.
Continuing with the seasonal theme, Stead teams up with first-time picture book author Julie Fogliano for a gentle look at one little bespectacled boy and his garden. It's a dear story of perseverance and patience, seeds and sun, and rain and cold. But, mostly it's about brown and green. We are learning to anticipate and appreciate the loving details that make up the illustrations, and the care Ms. Stead takes with her unusual woodcut-and-pencil technique.
The fun surprises: the sign that says "please do not stomp here; there are seeds and they are trying" and the little animal friends who arrive little by little (first the turtle, dog, bunnies and birds, then the bear (the bear!?) and the ants and the mice, and the tender gestures of each of those animals, even the mice with their tales entwined in love. Readers will love following all of those stories--I have seen kids just watch the dog on each page, dipping their head as he (along with the boy in the story) does. Notice how the body movement of the boy is reflected in all of the little creatures. Then, just read the story for color. From the first brown to the hopeful brown to the lightening brown, we get to
feel that s-l-o-w passage of time from seed sowing to germination, and see it in those tiny patches of green that turn into the final glorious spread of green, "all around you have green."
Perfect details. A heartfelt story. Unusual use of color. Stead vs. Stead. I would hate to have to choose.
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J. Vowell
Will it matter that the bear in And Then It's Spring and Bear Has a Story to Tell are so similar - especially when he is standing with his hand raised-it almost looks as if that page could have been inserted into either story?Posted : Jan 26, 2013 08:16
Bill Wright
Anyone else notice how the plants move about relative to each other and the landscape from picture to picture, and how even the landscape itself doesn't stay the same...sometimes it is perfectly flat, other times a gentle hill. Read the book, liked it, but just had the feeling that something was...off.Posted : Jan 03, 2013 10:03
TK
I like this book a lot, for all the things that have been said about it... but I had a sort of nitpick about the brown, brown, brown, GREEN! aspect of it. Poetically, yes, it can seem like spring appears overnight. But for me, the pacing was a little off -- there should have been one more spread of brown-turning-to-green between the seedlings and the full-on green spring. I'm probably being too practical.Posted : Dec 10, 2012 06:51
Megan Lambert
Extra Yarn was the Medal winner (by a wide margin) in my class's Mock Caldecott voting. Then, in addition to honoring And Then It's Spring, the students also gave honors to Red Knit Cap Girl and to Unspoken.Posted : Dec 07, 2012 06:28
Megan Lambert
On Tuesday my Picture Book course in the Simmons at The Carle program had its final class meeting at my house. I facilitated a Mock Caldecott discussion over a potluck dinner, and my ten students ended up selecting this book as an Honor title. I was dee-lighted since this is a favorite of mine, and my fingers are crossed that Erin Stead will be getting a phone call in January from the real Caldecott Committee...Posted : Dec 07, 2012 02:03