A BIG BED FOR LITTLE SNOW is coming! I'm pretty excited so I have lots of ways to celebrate!!
The book party is on Sat, October 12 at 3pm at Porter Square Books. Please come! As usual, I will have special party favors (I think maybe snowflake ornaments...you'll have to come to find out) for those attending!
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Isn't it so cute? Pre-order now!!!
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(Starred Review from Horn Book, September/October 2019)
Lin takes readers to the sky once again in this follow-up to
Caldecott Honor Book A Big Mooncake for Little Star (rev. 7/18).
Whereas a black night sky dominated Mooncake’s palette and a girl among the
stars was the mischief-maker, here our protagonist is an impish boy at home
amidst the clouds. “When winter began, Little Snow’s mommy made a big new bed
just for him.” The bed, in cornflower blue (the illustrations’ main accent
color, with warm browns, blacks, and grays), looks a lot like a cloud; and
though mom tells him it’s for sleeping, he gives in to temptation after she
departs and jumps gleefully on the “puffy and big and bouncy” thing. As he
leaps, feathers flutter down, and eventually he rips the bed. We turn the page
to see an apartment complex rooftop covered in snow: “What a lot of feathers
fell that day!” Lin’s illustrations are spare but expressive, with copious
white space used thoughtfully and deliberately. The boy’s pajamas are outlined
by the negative space around the snowflakes that adorn them and not by any
paint strokes, for example, giving the child—and the cloud-bed—all the focus.
The repeated use of “thump, thump, thump” for the mother’s inevitable return
(“Uh-oh!”) brings an exhilarating air of discovery to this already exuberant
story, to which boisterous listeners and readers will surely relate. What child
doesn’t want to jump on the bed? Playful type placement and varying font size
accentuate the joy of the jumping. A wondrous, wintry read.