Evie and the strawberry patch rescue

Stefanie Dahle, 1981-

Book - 2019

When Evie's strawberry patch is flooded she needs to find somewhere for her strawberry plants to live -- the flower fairies' garden is too crowded, the pond is too swampy and the woods are too dark. With the help of her friends, Evie moves her plants to their new home on the little hill, but they still won't grow. What has Evie forgotten? Through Evie's adventures young readers will learn about the natural world -- how plants grow and how all living things are connected. This is a story about determination, working together, caring for each other and putting mistakes right.

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Children's Room Show me where

jE/Dahle
0 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jE/Dahle Due Sep 18, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
Edinburgh : Floris Books 2019.
Language
English
German
Main Author
Stefanie Dahle, 1981- (author)
Item Description
Originally published in 2013 as 'Erdbeerinchen Erdbeerfee Alles voller Sonnenschien' by Arena Verlag GmBH.
Physical Description
24 unnumbered pages : colour illustrations ; 29 cm
Audience
Preschool.
ISBN
9781782505600
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A German import introduces a character who's akin to the American Strawberry Shortcake.Frolicking in puddles is fun on the first day of a rainstorm, but after a week, poor Evie the Strawberry Fairy's teapot house is flooded and her strawberry patch sodden, its fruit at risk of rotting. With the help of friends Brightwing Butterfly and Briar the Blackberry Fairy, she sets out on a rhubarb-leaf raft to seek shelter at the fairy tree. Alas, Skye the Air Fairy tells her there's no room, but intrepid Evie searches until she finds an old, fallen birdhouse. Other fairy folk (all of whom appear white with light skin and rosy cheeks) help her make it a cozy home-away-from-home, and she replants her strawberries. Then she dashes back to her flooded teapot house to invite her former neighbors the ladybugs to live nearby in a little home she builds for them so they can protect her plants from the "cheeky" greenflies. A closing scene shows Evie stretched out on the grass beside Brightwing, "enjoying the sweet smell of strawberries and the warm sunshine on her bare toes." It's a home-and-away story without the homecoming resolution typical to children's stories, which enhances rather than undermines its charm. Fairy-house aficionados untroubled by the all-white cast will enjoy exploring the detailed illustrations' play with scale, and it will fit right in with other springtime storytime fare.Sweet. (Picture book. 3-6) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.