On Bird Hill

Jane Yolen

Book - 2016

A young boy walking his dog through the witness a chick hatching from an egg.

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Subjects
Genres
Stories in rhyme
Picture books
Published
Apex, NC : The Cornell Lab Publishing Group [2016]
Language
English
Main Author
Jane Yolen (author)
Other Authors
Bob Marstall (illustrator)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 24 x 29 cm
ISBN
9781943645022
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

As it takes us on a poetic journey in words and illustrations, this book looks at all that is right in the world. A young child taking a walk examines a tree from trunk to limb to twig, where a mother bird has made a nest, and her egg is hatching. That chick then becomes the observer, seeing the nest, the tree, and, eventually, the child. Yolen's delicate rhyme is light and smooth; the words seem to flow on the same soft air that surrounds that nest, conveying the cyclical nature of the story. The swirls of the clouds are echoed by the rounded hills and the curvy, almost fantastical flora. The calmness of the scene is emphasized through a use of earth tones, and the newborn chick is bright yellow, dominating the page as it cracks out of a shell marked whimsically with stars. Pair with Wherever You Go (2015) by Pat Zietlow Miller for another positive view of the world and another journey.--Ching, Edie Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

First in a planned series (a portion of proceeds will benefit the Cornell Lab of Ornithology), this dreamy story follows a child and his dog on a stroll by the sea. Writing in characteristically well- structured verse, Yolen (the How Do Dinosaurs... series) echoes the story line of the nursery rhyme "The Green Grass Grew All Around," starting broadly ("As I was walking on Bird Hill,/ Though it was day, the moon shone still") then narrowing in on a tree, twig, bird, and nest. Inside, the boy sees "an egg,/ A little chick, all beak, wing, leg." Marstall (Butternut Hollow Pond) brings a slight Seussian weirdness to the setting-the narrowest of paths swoops around chartreuse hills, while impossibly skinny trees taper into branches capped by yellow, tendril-like flowers. When the chick hatches, the inside of its shell is a world unto itself, a nighttime scene featuring a house that looks like the one the boy calls home. It's a sweetly surreal meditation on the everyday wonders that await in the wild. Ages 3-5. Author's agent: Elizabeth Harding, Curtis Brown. Illustrator's agent: Abigail Samoun, Red Fox Literary. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

PreS-Gr 2-Featuring a single poem with a pleasing rhythm, this picture book opens at sunrise with the main character setting off on a walk with the dog. "As I was walking on Bird Hill,/Though it was day, the moon shone still." A fantastical aerial view of a sweeping hilly landscape shows a tiny moon still in the top left corner and the narrator and dog far away on the bottom right. Each subsequent spread presents two more lines from the poem that build on the lines that came before and work together with the art to bring readers closer into the scene. ("And on Bird Hill, I saw a tree.") From tree to trunk to limb to twig, readers are able to zoom in until they find a bird on a nest, and then even closer until, beneath the bird, the baby chick shows through the surface of its egg. Here the focus of the illustration pulls back, and the egg begins to hatch. The spread where the bird breaks through is left wordless, and at this point the book turns, putting the baby chick in charge of observing: "He saw the twig, limb, trunk, and tree,/And then he saw the moon./.and me,/As I walked down Bird Hill." The book is done in spring colors, and its bright visual design, interesting perspectives, and surprising details offer much to observe and ponder. VERDICT Along with the thought-provoking art, the poem's satisfying verses serve as a great jumping-off point for a nature walk or a bird-watching adventure for even the youngest listeners.-Julie Roach, Cambridge Public Library, MA © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A young dog-walker recalls the memorable experience of watching a chick hatch. To inaugurate a new series created for the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Yolen, who has often celebrated the natural world, provides a graceful poem reminiscent of the cumulative song "The Green Grass Grew All Around." Illustrator Marstall sets this in a fantastical landscape with Seussian trees and surprising, pleasing tiny details, including humans, animals, oversized insects, and, far away, sailboats on an ocean. The dog-walker sets out just before sunrise; a waning crescent moon still shines when they reach Bird Hill. The tree is on the summit; a cutaway image on the bottom of the page showing the walkers' path reveals its roots. Slowly, they close in on the tree, the limb, the twig, the nest, and the "bird at rest." A striking spread shows a cloud of feathers and the barely visible chick, still in the egg. A later, wordless close-up of the emerging chick invites young readers and listeners to stop and wonder. There's humor, too, when the hatchling fluffs his wings and stretches his legs. Then the point of view changes, moving from the observer to the chick, who looks around to see "the moon / and me." Carefully crafted rhyming couplets beg to be read aloud again and again. An imaginative and original depiction of one of life's everyday miracles. (Picture book. 2-6) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.