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Review: Wolf in the Snow

Wolf in the Snow 1. Bibliographic: Cordell, Matthew. Wolf in the Snow. New York: Feiwell and Friends, 2017. ISBN 978-1-250-07636-6 2. Summary: A young girl and a wolf pup set off on their own paths through the snow, only to end up lost , together. The girl helps the wolf find its family, eventually becoming too tired to find her own way home. The wolf pack returns to help her reunite with her family. 3. Critical analysis: Illustrations of a brave girl in a red coat traveling through a snowstorm tell a story of compassion between herself and a young wolf. Only a few onomatopoeias are used to indicate feeling or plot points, but the expressiveness of the girl’s eyes and her body language convey most of the meaning. The facing page layouts done in ink and watercolor are powerful, particularly when the girl and the mother wolf come face to face. This 2018 Caldecott winning story is wonderful to sit and read with a child or two, but would be challenging to convey i...

Historical Fiction: Between Shades of Gray

Sepetys, Ruta. Between Shades of Gray. Philomel Books, 2011.     ISBN 978-0399254123 Plot summary/ critical analysis 1941, Lithuania: Lina and her family are taken by the Soviets in the middle of the night. They are separated from Lina’s father and taken to train cars that will eventually take them and other Lithuanians, Estonians, and Latvians to Soviet labor camps. Lina takes every opportunity to draw, finding both a release and purpose; she hopes that her drawing will make their way to her father so they can be found and rescued. Lina manages to form relationships with other prisoners, even falling in love at one point. Underneath all the trauma is a story of continuing to have hope and to fight even when it’s hard. Sepetys tackles the trauma and confusion in a straightforward way. It is depressing and necessary storytelling of a time in history that was covered up and ignored for decades. The descriptions are vivid and heartbreaking; you...

Traditional Lit. Review: The Three Little Javelinas

The Three Little Javelinas by Susan Lowell and Jim Harris 1. Bibliographic- Lowell, Susan. The Three Little Javelinas. Ill. by Jim Harris. Arizona: Rising Moon, 1992. ISBN 0-87358-542-9 2. Summary- Three sibling javelinas (southwestern relative of pigs) set off on their own journeys to live life and make a home in the southwest desert. As each sibling attempts to build their homes - one of tumbleweeds, one of saguaros ribs, and the other of adobe- a trickster coyote follows them, trying to get a good meal. The coyote destroys the first two javelinas’ homes, and they run to their sister’s adobe brick house. Together they withstand the coyote’s attack, and send him howling into the desert. 3. Critical analysis- A twist on the classic three little pigs, the Three Little Javelinas teaches about patience, cleverness, and perseverance of the siblings running from a coyote. This tale is set in the Sonoran desert, and it moves quickly in its descriptions of t...