The gifts of the animals A Christmas tale

Carole Gerber

Book - 2019

Cows, oxen, sheep, and birds prepare a manger for the birth of Jesus Christ and an angel announces the birth to the shepherds tending their sheep nearby.

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Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Stories in rhyme
Published
Sanger, CA : Familius, LLC [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Carole Gerber (author)
Other Authors
Yumi Shimokawara (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9781641701594
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

"Loosely based on a 12th century Latin song" turned English Christmas hymn--"The Animal Carol"--this story imagines how the animals in the celebrated Bethlehem stable might have made way for Jesus's birth. In realistic illustrations, each docile beast offers its own preparation in turn: "The ox that stands in the drafty shed/ drops straw into a manger bed"; "The sheep tear loose bits of their wool/ to make the bed feel soft and full." A tired Mary and Joseph are welcomed in, and Christ is born before being set in the animals' carefully prepared trough. Hospitality and joy emanate from the lowly scene, drawing the creatures, angels, and local shepherds in to celebration. Gerber's gentle rhyme flows seamlessly, while Shimokawara's softly hued art sets a peaceful, sleepy scene, making it ideal for bedtime reading. Postscript includes a condensed retelling of Christ's birth from the book of Luke. A sweetly wrought spin on the traditional Nativity story. Ages 3--8. (Sept.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A poetic imagining of gifts from the Nativity animals to the newborn baby Jesus.Gerber's lilting rhymes reinterpret biblical text from the book of Luke, Chapter 2, verses 1-16 in the King James Version (reproduced in the back of the book). The frontmatter notes that they draw inspiration from "a 12th century Latin song, which became known in England as The Animal Carol' "; within, the author imagines what the Nativity animals might have done to "prepare their stable for Christ's birth." She writes that an ox "drops straw into a manger bed." Then "sheep tear loose bits of their wool / to make the bed feel soft and full." Birds on the stable's roof give feathers, which mice carry to the manger. A cow finds a blanket and adds it to the bed, too. Mary and Joseph appear with the baby, and the realistic-style illustrations depict the trio as olive-skinned with dark hair, and the shepherds have a similar appearance. The first angel to appear seems white, but the heavenly host singing in exaltation includes at least three angels of color (albeit ethereally washed-out). The book proper closes with shepherds and animals gathered around the Holy Family as they "all sing: Glory to our newborn King!' " Shimokawara glories in textures, making the whorls in the animals' fur and the folds in human characters' robes seem touchable.A handsome, imaginative volume for Christmas bookshelves. (Picture book. 3-6) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.