Wind watchers

Micha Archer

Book - 2025

"Seasons come and go, and the wind wafts its way through them all. This delights a family of children, and when they ask the wind, "How will you blow today?" they get a kick out of not knowing what answer they'll get. Will the wind send gentle breezes that tickle and delight, cooling them off on hot days? Or strong gusts that knock their hats off and send them running inside on stormy days? One thing is for certain to our wind watchers--the wind is an always-changing wonder and constantly takes their breath away!"--

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Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
New York : Nancy Paulsen Books 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Micha Archer (author)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 24 x 27 cm
Audience
Ages 3-7.
ISBN
9780593616550
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

This lyrical picture book gently explores the changing seasons through the eyes of a group of children and their connection with the wind. The wind serves as both a guide and companion throughout the changing seasons. For example, in winter the wind blows swirling snow and captures the children's breath both literally and figuratively. When summer arrives, the children eagerly ask the wind for help flying their kite, sharing a sense of joy and teamwork. The wind is playful, wild, caring, and informative, revealed in ways such as using wind chimes to lull the children to sleep or surprising the children with its wild, untamed energy during a thunderstorm. The narrative beautifully captures the essence of nature's changing moods and the cyclical flow of seasons. With vibrant, expressive illustrations and a poetic tone, this book invites readers to marvel at the wind's many forms and the quiet lessons it imparts about nature and time. This tender tale highlights the beauty of the natural world while inviting readers to find wonder in everyday moments.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In lilting words and elegant collage spreads by Caldecott Honoree Archer, three children are shown encountering the varied powers of wind across the seasons. The three light-brown-skinned kids are first seen standing on top of a rise, faces turned up, dark hair blowing sideways. "Sometimes we call out to Wind, 'How will you blow today?' " A page turn shows them perched in a pink-blossomed tree: "In Spring, Wind answers with a puff at the petals." And as the kids walk through a pine forest in the rain, three umbrellas glow with color from patterned papers in red, yellow, orange, and blue. In warmer weather on a sandy beach, the children holler, "Can you help us fly our kite?" Fall and winter bring new wonders, including released milkweed down and icy breezes. Fully developed right to the edges, tapestry-like spreads consistently offer new things to find--the interesting shadows of beach umbrellas, a distant house with its windows alight--in this captivating year-long study of an elusive, invisible force. Ages 3--7. (Mar.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

PreS-Gr 3--A book that lyrically covers the experience of wind. "How will you blow today?" Archer asks of the wind. Season by season, she takes readers on a journey through encounters with the wind: flying a kite, watching ripples in a pond, chasing dandelion seeds, and jumping in fallen leaves. It's a book that covers how wind is invisible, but its force blows spring petals to the ground. It makes, at times, no sound, but it wrestles with wind chimes in the evening. Archer stays true to her style, shaping a journey through steadfast inquiry and vibrant illustrations, bringing the sensory experience to life. VERDICT A fresh and poetic offering for wind and weather-themed story times. Recommended for all picture book collections.--Jennifer Noonan

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

Three children experience the invisible power of the wind over the course of a year. The children -- eyes upward, dark hair flowing against an expansive blue sky -- begin with a direct question to Wind itself: "How will you blow today?" Each subsequent full-bleed, double-page spread provides an answer. In the spring, text nestles in the negative space between a tree's pink-flowered branches as Wind provides a light "puff at the petals." In summer, the children lounge on a dock under a willow tree, waiting for Wind to bring the relief of a breeze on a sweltering day. Later, Wind stirs up storms. "Sometimes I like to be WILD!" it says, chasing the children indoors. The lyrical, poetic language is easy to read aloud, and thoughtful positioning of text on the page creates a sense of cohesion with each image. Archer's masterful use of acrylic ink and paper art showcases a variety of techniques, compositions, and perspectives. From the glittering depth of collaged streaming rain to the textured, sleepy haze of a darkened bedroom, each page-turn inspires the same wonder Archer depicts in the faces of her three awestruck subjects. Jessica Tackett MacDonaldMarch/April 2025 p.44 (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

Follow a trio of children through the seasons as they ask the Wind, "How will you blow today?" In spring, the brown-skinned youngsters' dark hair dances animatedly in the breeze as "Wind answers with a puff of the petals, making them flutter and fall." The lightly personified Wind is playful, even mercurial. In summer, it might respond favorably to their pleas for "one big whoooshhh" to lift their kite. Other times, Wind--who likes "to be WILD!"--might cause a tumultuous storm. The narration is conversational, even breezy at times. Short, frequent pops of alliteration and compelling turns of phrase feel wonderfully lyrical, such as a young skater thanking the wintry Wind "for the extra-looooong glide." Brilliant acrylic ink and intricate collage illustrations are as exuberant as the Wind. The pages are briskly busy, from an autumnal spread showing seed pods soaring as a child watches in awe to a serene, almost quiltlike image of youngsters lying languidly near a pond on a hot summer's day, begging Wind for a cool gust. The full-bleed spreads are dynamic, featuring gloriously luminous, deeply saturated colors and breathtaking changes of perspective, such as wide eyes peeking out a window onto blurred streaks of "swirling snow." Upon reaching the satisfying last page, in which the Wind says, "Sometimes my work takes my breath away!'" readers will agree: "It takes away ours, too." Joyful and poetic, a tale that will delight all year long.(Picture book. 4-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.