The
Dead Bird by Margaret Wise Brown,
Remy Charlip (Illustrator)
‘Finding
a still warm but dead bird, a group of children give it a fitting
burial and every day, until they forget, come again to the woods
to sing to the dead bird and place fresh flowers on its grave. An
excellent handling of the subject of death in which all young
children have a natural interest.’ —BL.
Bumble
Bee (Growing Tree) by
Margaret Wise Brown, Victoria Raymond (Illustrator),
Margaret Wise Brown
Sweet, fuzzy, round,
and tumbly--the bee in Margaret Wise Brown's much loved poem is
completely alive and lovable. Victoria Raymond's sculptured
illustrations make him even more huggable and create a bright
journey that little fingers will love to trace. Full color.
Another
Important Book by
Margaret Wise Brown, Christopher Raschka (Illustrator),
Chris Raschka (Illustrator)
The companion title to Goodnight
Moon creator Margaret Wise Brown's 1949 classic, The
Important Book, was published for the first time in 1999,
with wonderful illustrations by Caldecott Honor recipient Chris
Raschka of Yo!
Yes? "Yo, yes!" we say. Just as Brown's first
volume distills the essence of everyday entities, this splendid
rhyming picture book zeroes in on the most important things about
being one, two, three, four, five, and six years old.
The important thing about being Four/ is that you
are bigger than you were before..../ You can blink and think/ as
quick as a wink./ You can open your eyes/ to a world of
surprise.
Children love the process of reaching each new
year's landmark, and this whimsical equivalent of a wall-notch
height chart will thoroughly delight them. It is difficult to
imagine the book without Raschka's wriggling, singing, flinging
babies, toddlers, and kids of all colors, exquisitely crafted with
vivacious brushstrokes and vibrant watercolors. He has also
cleverly woven numbers into his illustrations--a five-pointed star
behind the five-year-old, a pinwheel of six circles behind the
six-year-old. The splashy modern artwork rejuvenates Brown's
half-a-century-old rhymes, plants them squarely in 1999, and
guarantees a future classic. --Karin Snelson