Wild everywhere

Katya Balen

Book - 2025

"In the woods, the girl finds wildness all around her--when she climbs toward the sky and shouts her name into the air, a bird sings back to her. She finds secrets in the stars and stories in the earth. But when her family leaves wildness behind, she sees only towering gray-glass buildings, taller than trees, nothing she can climb. It's not possible to find the stars, and the moon hangs all alone. She feels bereft-until a bird calls to her from the sky, and following its path through the city streets to the river leads to natural sights that take her breath away"--

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Children's Room Show me where

jE/Balen
2 / 2 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jE/Balen Checked In
Children's Room jE/Balen Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
Somerville, Massachusetts : Candlewick Press 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Katya Balen (author)
Other Authors
Gill (Illustrator) Smith (illustrator)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 28 cm
ISBN
9781536243000
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

A transplanted child learns that nature lives deep within, wherever she travels, in a lyrical reminder to appreciate small moments in any environment. "In the woods I find wildness all around me." Mushrooms, stars, and a clutch of bunnies delight a girl given freedom to roam. "But one day we leave the wildness behind," she shares, and the steely city skyscrapers feel inhospitable to someone so accustomed to the forest. A bird beckons the overwhelmed child through busy streets to an urban park that helps her understand "there is wildness everywhere." First-person text in emphatic dual fonts includes poetic descriptors ("silver fish suppers," "ink-dark beetles"), while soft-edged mixed-media artwork shifts its perspective to emphasize the child's feeling of smallness in the city and the oversized presence that wild creatures and nature play in her life. The girl's orange-jacketed explorations are deeply reminiscent of Beatrice Alemagna's On a Magical Do-Nothing Day (2017), though this is a quieter pick for kids who carry the wildness within.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A nature-loving child leaves the countryside for the city. In place of the wild, with its visible constellations and lovely plants and animals (including, best of all, a beautiful blue-winged bird), the young, light-skinned narrator sees only "gray glass buildings" with "fish scale sides" that cannot be climbed. The urban streets are dark and rainy, and the protagonist laments, "The city is lonely and so am I.I've lost my wild." Printed in a hand-written font, these last four words are nothing less than a cry for help--but one that is soon answered. The blue-winged bird arrives and leads the child to a river that poetically "rolls and twists and shows me the secrets hidden under its tongue." Once again, birds, animals, plants, and insects appear. The child climbs a tree and exults in nature's abundance. "A burst of parakeets color the air green." A fox appears as stars emerge in the sky. The child now understands: "There is wildness everywhere." With lyrical text marked by clever turns of phrase and imaginative, mixed-media illustrations contrasting muted city scenes with vibrant depictions of the wilderness, this is a strong read-aloud for group and family settings. Enticing images of flora and fauna will send readers out on their own personal nature hunts.(Picture book. 4-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.