Shrinking Violet

Laurel Snyder

Book - 2025

Young Violet shrinks and grows depending on how she feels, drawing from her inner strength to become bigger when fear makes her small.

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Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Fiction
Romans
Published
San Francisco : Chronicle Books 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Laurel Snyder (author)
Other Authors
LeUyen Pham (illustrator)
Physical Description
pages cm
Audience
Ages 5-8
Grades K-1
ISBN
9781797200729
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Seemingly pint-size worries--spiders, night sounds--make a child literally shrink in this polished picture book from Snyder (The Book of Candles), writing in blank verse tercets, and Pham (The Man Who Didn't Like Animals), working in jewel-toned gouache. Young Violet, depicted with pale skin and flowing brown hair, lives a seemingly blissful life in a cliffside castle with golden-headed Bird, who provides emotional constancy. But when Bird's "CHIRRUP, CHIRRUP" awakens her one night, he's nowhere to be seen, and Violet ventures into darkness, her fright rendering her "a thimble of a girl." Finding Bird wounded and in peril triggers a new emotion--"a flash of fire,/ a thrumming heart"--and with it a transformation. The book's orientation turns vertical and the artwork goes phosphorescent as, in a fury, "Violet GREW./ Quick as a lick, she was a cat, a bear!/ Violet was the tallest tree in the forest." Danger routed, she self-soothes ("She imagined warm toast/ with a pat of butter/ until she was herself again") and carries Bird home. Violet hasn't banished fear permanently, but she now knows it's all right for it to ebb and flow, vividly assuring readers that being brave doesn't mean eliminating fear. Ages 5--8. Author's agent: Tina Dubois, ICM Partners. Illustrator's agent: Holly McGhee, Pippin Properties. (Mar.)

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Review by School Library Journal Review

PreS-Gr 3--Violet, with pale skin and dark hair, resides in a stately castle near a forest by the sea with her constant companion, Bird. The quality of Snyder's writing establishes a powerful, intense metaphor for anxiety: when startled (by rustling or a spider), Violet feels "trembly" and begins to shrink, trapped in the loop of getting smaller and smaller, hiding from what or who made her afraid. She attempts to stop this process by thinking soothing thoughts. The illustrations, rendered in gouache, are central to conveying the emotional scale. The artwork effectively contrasts Violet's descent into fear, making her a thimble of a girl in the enormous night, with her emotional turning point in becoming brave to save Bird, growing quick as a lick into the tallest tree in the forest. She eventually calms herself by picturing simple, ordinary things, such as making her bed. The story concludes with a realistic resolution, noting she still shrinks and grows if not always happily, but now strides out brave and careful. The clean, realistic writing and story make it relatable even as it resides inside a fantasy world, with the colors washing out the characters as if to invite readers to focus on and see themselves in Violet. VERDICT This title is a great addition to social-emotional learning collections, offering a dynamic and unique approach to discussing anxiety, inner strength, and resilience with young readers during a fun and compelling read-aloud.--Richard Winters

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Shrinking Violet must face her anxieties when a friend needs her most. Violet, who inhabits a "stately castle near the forest by the sea" with her avian pal, is at ease when she's with Bird, but she becomes overwhelmed by fear whenever he flies off to explore. When Violet is frightened, her body shrinks until she's nothing but a tiny wisp. One night, she races toward the faraway sound of Bird's alarmed chirping. Narrowly escaping an enormous predatory bird, Violet is so terrified that she's nearly invisible by the time she reaches her injured friend, and the larger bird has returned. But Violet is filled with love, and something magical happens: She grows until she's taller than even the trees, bursting with courage. Even the book can scarcely contain Violet as her looming form nearly stretches off the page. Once the danger has passed, Violet visualizes favorite things--like warm toast with butter--until she's just the right size to carry her friend home. The two live "ever after, if not always happily," with Violet sometimes shrinking, sometimes growing, but always able to look inward and anchor herself. Snyder relies on sweet, quiet text to craft a modern mindfulness fairy tale starring an uncertain yet strong hero. Rendered in Pham's signature gouache, the pages glow with lush, saturated blues and purples as pale-skinned, dark-haired Violet trembles, twirls, and ultimately blossoms into pastel rainbows of courage. Gorgeous and grounding--a gentle guide to outgrowing your fears.(Picture book. 4-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.