The big empty A sagebrush survival story

Kirbi Fagan

Book - 2025

People passing by call this land the big empty. / But I call it home.In spare poetic text written from the point of view of a big sagebrush, readers are transported to the American west. This incredibly resilient plant, which can live more than one hundred years, provides food, shelter, and shadows to conceal both predators and prey. After a wildfire passes through, it grows again and will thrive once more. Author and illustrator Kirbi Fagan captures the nature of the vital sagebrush with awe-inspiring words and gorgeous illustrations.

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
poetry
Nature poetry
Poetry
Poésie
Published
Minneapolis : Millbrook Press [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Kirbi Fagan (author)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 24 x 28 cm
Audience
Ages 5-10 Millbrook Press.
Grades 2-3 Millbrook Press.
ISBN
9798765627242
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

"I am the one that grows where nothing else will," narrates a big sagebrush in this evocative account of making home in the "big empty"--North America's western shrublands. Poetic lines establish the barren quality of the environment, but just as the hardy plant calls this place "home," so too does it represent a dwelling place for the many critters who rely upon the flora for shelter, nourishment, and cover. As such, the big sagebrush becomes "a thirsty mother's only hope," and "a nursery/ under the wide Western sky." Featuring pastel, colored pencil, collage paper, and digital techniques, Fagan's moody, dusky-hued illustrations showcase species (identified in back matter) interacting with the plant's densely twisted limbs. Danger arrives in the form of fire, but the speaker demonstrates resilience, and closing verse offers a commanding summary: "In a land of sun and fire/ I am life." Ages 5--10. (Oct.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

In a near-empty land, sagebrush survives. Sagebrush, home and food for wild creatures in the "nowhere land" of the American West, describes its world. As an RV passing through leaves dust in its wake, Fagan's poetic first-person narrative carries readers through a slim story that documents the food and shelter sagebrush provides for desert-dwelling animals, as well as a devastating fire and subsequent recovery. "I am hope," the sagebrush asserts, sending down long roots and "bloom[ing] bursts of yellow." "I am life." Fagan's striking artwork is just as integral as her meditative text. The author/illustrator, who honed her equine-drawing skills with Rosanne Parry's novelA Horse Named Sky (2023), includes wild horses on several pages. Readers will also spot pronghorns, greater sage-grouse, pygmy rabbits, and sage thrashers (identified and expounded upon in the backmatter). The two-level text--consisting of words in a smaller font and brief statements in a larger, seemingly handwritten font--takes up little space on these spreads, which reflect the vastness of the landscape. The images have the look of pastels, done mostly in shades of brown, culminating in a striking fire that leaves the land gray and barren before the hardy plant returns. The words read aloud smoothly, and the images will show well, making Kirby's auspicious authorial debut a good choice for small-group sharing. A dramatic depiction of an unusual ecosystem. (more about sagebrush)(Informational picture book. 5-9) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.