Review by Booklist Review
This lovely tribute to trees and the roles they play in ecosystems combines sparse, elegant text with warm, expressive illustrations that will fully engage young audiences. Seen from the vantage points of a young girl and boy, the story begins in spring with imaginative descriptions of the changes taking place ("Next thing you know, / PRESTO-- / sap inside / those cold, / bare limbs get busy! / Leaves / UNFOLD like a / new dress"), starting with buds and roots and branching out (literally) to bugs, birds, lizards, squirrels, and raccoons over the ensuing summer, fall, and winter seasons. The text highlights the interconnectedness of this thriving community and explains how the tree provides shelter, filters the air, helps retain soil and water levels, and offers comfortable, cooling shade. The pleasingly detailed illustrations feature an array of bright pastel hues against more muted greens and browns and include kid's-eye-view close-ups. With a brief bibliography, this makes a great choice for a read-aloud introduction to units on ecology and conservation.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Horn Book Review
This beautifully crafted ode to trees and their vital role in the ecosystem is composed of a free-verse text that lends itself well to reading aloud, accompanied by mixed-media illustrations in a muted palette but with plenty of vibrancy and movement. The story begins with two children playing beneath a large tree in the springtime as "the rain / ROARS! / GUSHES! / POURS / down through that / rich, / dark / soil." The rain nourishes the tree, which in turn drops seeds, continuing the natural cycle as animals find shelter and sustenance in and around it. The book explores the seasons, culminating in the return of spring, which brings "RAIN, / and rain brings / BUDS. / Buds bring / FLOWERS, / and flowers bring / BUZZ." Though the focus in the middle of the book is purely on the tree and the animals, we eventually return to the two children, blowing bubbles as the text reminds us of the role trees play in our breathing. Facts about how trees filter air and produce oxygen are supported by sources cited in the bibliography and expanded upon in the back matter. This poetic and educational book serves as an engaging introduction to the significance of trees in the environment and the importance of conservation efforts. Kirsten CaldwellJanuary/February 2025 p.101 (c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
So many reasons to love trees! Writing in animated free verse that calls urgently to be read aloud, Harrison celebrates a tree's residents, from bugs that "CRAWL and / CLIMB and / SCURRY up that trunk" to birds that nest or peck out cavities just right for later comers like opossums and raccoons to "SETTLE in. / And maybe / they make / their own babies? / For sure!" Meanwhile, the tree has plenty of "tree business" to conduct, such as making flowers and seeds, breathing out the oxygen that "we BREATHE IN! / For sure," keeping soil in place, and holding "her families / safe in her STRONG arms" when "storms HOWL / and thunder goes / BOOM! BOOM! BOOM!" As small creatures crawl or flit through leafy boughs above in Cosgrove's bustling, populous illustrations, two brown-skinned children below blow bubbles or peaceably share a rope swing in the cool shade. "And best of all," the poem ends, when spring comes round again, new seeds will drop so that "very soon / we will have / a fine new tree. / OH YES!" In a personal afterword, the author describes a certain beloved tree in his yard and suggests that readers might pick one for themselves: "I think trees love it when we love them." An effervescent appreciation of all that trees do and are. (bibliography, index) (Informational picture book. 5-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.