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Water in the Park

A Book About Water and the Times of the Day

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
   From the first orange glow on the water in the pond, to the last humans and animals running home from an evening rain shower, here is a day-in-the-life of a city park, and the playground within it. A rhythmic text and sweet, accessible images will immerse parents, toddlers, and young children in the summer season and the community within a park. Seasoned picture book readers may notice Emily Jenkins's classic inspirations for this book: Alvin Tresselt's Caldecott Medal-winning White Snow, Bright Snow, illustrated by Roger Duvoisin, and Charlotte Zolotow's The Park Book, illustrated by H. A. Rey.
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  • Reviews

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from April 1, 2013
      From sunrise to sunset on a scorching summer day, people (and animals) use the water found in a park in many different ways. "Tup tup. Tup tup." A cat drinks from a puddle. Dogs splash in the pond to stay cool. Children clean their sticky fingers or build a sand castle complete with moat. Jenkins begins this close inspection of a city's greenery at 6 a.m., when the turtles are just sliding off the rocks and the park is waking up. Every hour is told in small moments, some simple ("Around four o'clock, Benjamin F. skins his knee. / His sitter washes it clean with water from the fountain") and some amusingly poetic ("Ribbons of water seep out of the rose beds and under benches.... / Pigeons strut at the edges of the new puddles, / cooling their pigeon ankles"). But perhaps the most fun is searching Graegin's incredibly detailed illustrations. By 10 a.m., the playground is filled to the brim with kids and adults, some of whom will be introduced later in the story and others for whom readers can create their own narrative. It is a seek and find, with curiosity as a guide. Water may flow in abundance through these pages, but this title is an outpouring of observation that repays careful readers richly. (Picture book. 3-6)

      COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      May 1, 2013

      PreS-Gr 2-A catalog of ordinary events that occur in a park between sunrise and sunset, these scenarios involve dogs, babies, ice-cream trucks, gardeners, and, yes, water. It runs out of a fountain for two tots on a playdate, swirls around the ankles of wading dogs, and falls from the sky in gray sheets. Graegin's warm, natural palette brings out delightful details in the mundane and attempts to elevate the plodding text to something more than a list. But when the sun finally sets on the park, readers' thirst for a story might be left decidedly unquenched.-Jenna Boles, Washington-Centerville Public Library, OH

      Copyright 2013 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from March 15, 2013
      Preschool-G *Starred Review* It's a hot day at the city park, a pleasant green oasis of open space, play equipment, and water. The jacket illustration offers a bird's-eye view of the pond, hill, playground, and flower beds, areas that will be seen again and again from different angles. Around six o'clock in the morning, several dogs and their people head for the pond. By seven, two babies and their grown-ups have arrived at the playground. Hour by hour throughout the day, visitors come and go. In the crowded playground at ten o'clock, a sprinkler in a shallow pool amuses toddlers, while older kids line up at the drinking fountain for water to fill their water balloons, to wet the sand for sand castles, and to cool the slide. While the quiet text creates a satisfying, structured narrative full of details that will intrigue young children, they will also be engaged by the inviting pictures. Using digitally assembled pencil drawings and ink washes, Graegin creates illustrations with a traditional look and plenty of human interest. The park within the book becomes a destination that a child can visit and revisit, noticing new details each time and connecting familiar ones in new ways. A wonderfully fresh look at a timeless topic.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      May 1, 2013
      On a warm day, just before six a.m., a city park starts to stir: turtles laze on rocks by the pond, and dogs arrive, owners in tow, for an early-morning swim. Next, a few kids and their caretakers show up; at eight, the sprinklers are turned on, and by mid-morning the playground is mobbed. And so the day goes: small children come and go per naptime schedule, grownups take their lunch breaks on park benches, and the ice-cream truck arrives, along with another surge of delighted kids. By five o'clock, people start to trickle home. Six o'clock sees the sprinklers turned off, and by seven, the dogs have returned for an evening swim -- until a much-welcomed rainstorm at eight causes the heat to break and sends everyone inside for the night. Jenkins's introductory author's note (on the copyright page) sets her story in Brooklyn's Prospect Park, where she was inspired, because of "many ninety-eight-degree days," to think about the various ways the park's water was used. It's a very narrow jumping-off point, but one that nearly every city kid will appreciate. (The author's note also acknowledges Jenkins's debt of gratitude to Charlotte Zolotow and H. A. Rey's The Park Book and Alvin Tresselt and Roger Duvoisin's White Snow, Bright Snow.) Graegin's pencil-and-ink-wash illustrations (digitally colored and assembled) beautifully reflect the changing light, the shifting population, and the various activities throughout the day; some of the pictures play up the quiet expanse of nature, while others are jam-packed with people enjoying the outdoors. The constant, in both text and illustrations, is water -- pond, drinking, sprinkler, puddle -- and a subtle message about urban community. elissa gershowitz

      (Copyright 2013 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2013
      Just before six a.m., a city park starts to stir: dogs arrive, owners in tow, for an early-morning swim in the pond. Next, a few kids and their caretakers show up; at eight, the sprinklers are turned on, and by mid-morning the playground is mobbed. And so the day goes. Graegin's pencil-and-ink-wash illustrations beautifully reflect the changing light and the shifting population.

      (Copyright 2013 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:2.8
  • Lexile® Measure:590
  • Interest Level:K-3(LG)
  • Text Difficulty:0-2

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