Review by School Library Journal Review
K-Gr 2--In this sequel to Mrs. Noah's Pockets, Mrs. Noah, a biblical flood survivor and practitioner of kindness, plants a garden. Mrs. Noah surveys the terrain and chooses a spot for her garden, a place that will make her new land feel like home. Mayhew's richly textured collage art has vibrant colors and elongated lines that radiate serenity. The step-by-step momentum of Morris's gentle text suggests a powerful inevitability to Mrs. Noah's work, who acts as a magical Miss Rumphius, strewing seeds and tending varied plants. Readers familiar with the first book will understand why Mrs. Noah receives gardening help from the unicorns and dragons she saved from extinction during the flood; those new to the story will likely enjoy the mythical creatures as part of the lush, colorful landscape. Morris's story asserts a case for active stewardship between people and their environment. The visual narrative reinforces the promise of nurturing through the figure of Mrs. Noah, as her green dress and blue-purple cloak swell to reveal a pregnant belly. In the final spreads, a baby joins the family as they cultivate a home among the flora. VERDICT A verdant reminder to treasure our natural world, weaving together biblical, ecological, and magical strands.--Robbin E. Friedman, Chappaqua Lib., NY
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
As Mr. Noah converts the Ark into a home after making landfall, Mrs. Noah finds a place to create a new garden. Gazing at a blue, stony landscape, Mrs. Noah misses her home's garden. She looks around the land and finds a place where some trees had hung on through the flood. Her children, whose skin tones vary between Mrs. Noah's dark brown skin and Mr. Noah's pale skin, help her to clear space and build stone walls and terraces. Some mythical creatures help too. Mrs. Noah plants seeds from her pockets and "trees, shrubs, bushes and bulbs" that were carried on the Ark. She works on the garden all day long and does homemaking chores at night ("Curtains. At last," Mr. Noah thinks). As she continues shaping the garden and "the earth blossom[s] under her touch," the rains fall gently, and the pictures show her belly growing. On Midsummer's Eve, Mrs. Noah sleeps in the garden, and the next morning, the children find a world in blossom, loud with bird song and buzzing bees. The text is thick with lush, lovely description and symbolic imagery of life and regeneration. With densely colored, busy collage illustrations, this distinctive story evokes a combination of the fantastical, the religious (both Biblical and pagan), the ancient, the modern, and the timeless. A few surprising details (like the use of a sewing machine) call unnecessary attention to themselves, but these quirks are easily forgiven. An imagination well worth walking through. (Picture book. 4-9) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.