Review by Kirkus Book Review
A meditation on being big, being little, and finding ways to share the proverbial sky.Two little boys play in their yard beneath a big Climbing Tree, which Big Brother, being the bigger and stronger, is the first to scale. Little Brother is eager to join him, but his mother reminds him that he is simply too little for the big tree. Time passes, and Little Brother is allowed to climb the tree, but when he has climbed as high as a bird, Big Brother has already climbed as high as a mountain, and then higher still, to the Sun. Little Brother cannot compete, as Big Brother reminds him "there isn't room for both of usthere's only one Sun in the sky." Excluded from the possibility of ever catching up, Little Brother simply weeps in his mother's lap. The boys ultimately become lonely and find resolution when Big Brother Sun agrees to share the sky with Little Brother as the Moon. With folkloric echoes aplenty (but no specific credit), the plot feels very familiar, and the boys' mother comes across as little more than a naysayer to Little Brother. It is the book's illustrations that truly carry the day. Every detail is charming and ingeniousfrom the sumptuous gold-on-green endpapers to the two boys' joy, represented by flying birds, racing deer, and icy mountains. Both boys are depicted with light-brown skin and fluffy, brown hair. A visual treat. (Picture book. 3-8) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.