Our green city

Tanya Lloyd Kyi, 1973-

Book - 2022

"Welcome to our green city! You'll find flowers, trees, animals... and wind turbines, electric cars, and solar panels, too. In this city, a utopian imagination of what a sustainable community could look like, neighbours from diverse backgrounds come together to care for their surroundings and one another. As readers are invited on a journey through the city, they learn about what makes it environmentally friendly, from electric transportation to green classrooms to community gardens. With an encouraging tone that's never didactic, the text asks questions to encourage readers to find small details: butterflies fluttering by, birds sipping nectar from flowers, and all the ways people work together to take care of the community.... The uniquely positive depiction of how city life could look in the future is complemented by backmatter that shares some common environmentally friendly ideas kids can try out at home. This uplifting picture book celebrates sustainability and community and encourages kids to think about what their ideal green city might look like."--

Saved in:

Children's Room Show me where

jE/Kyi
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jE/Kyi Checked In
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

In Our Green City, the text describes a somewhat idyllic place where "we take care of all living things." These practices include everything from using solar panels and windmills to creating backyard farms and rain gardens. Another focus of the book is community. Told in first-person plural, the book invites the reader into the city's life and depicts diverse families and neighbors meeting on the street, in a garden, and at a block party. The author adds frequent interactive touches (through questions like "How many wheels can you count?" or "Can you spot something fast and something slow?") that help make the book a good read-aloud for preschoolers. Bright, busy illustrations capture the urban feel as well as environmentally conscious details. At the same time, the city feels reassuringly familiar, like it could be the reader's own home. A closing two-page spread of a backyard highlights "More Ways to Be Green," such as growing herbs in window boxes and using a compost bin. Overall, a light, positive take on urban community and sustainability.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 1--3--For educators who want to buoy children's spirits with a snapshot of what an active green campaign looks like, this book is a cheerful road map. In spread after spread, Lloyd Kyi and Larmour show familiar scenes--crosswalks, community gardens, a family at the kitchen table--where readers can locate all the green choices that have been made toward preserving the planet. Electric cars, pedestrians, and people biking, or scootering have made great transportation choices; a Black child splashing in a puddle includes descriptions of how rain water has been captured for use; there are visible solar panels on a distant house; included is a line about pebbles helping to whisk water away. Every page has details to pore over and squirrel away for discussion; every detail could be expanded upon in the classroom or used in a checklist for children to test out their own green homes. The mood is ebullient, and the information is neutral. This is an accessible way to make the topic of climate change and conservation nonthreatening and imminently doable. VERDICT A great guide for all shelves, and a recommended purchase.--Kimberly Olson Fakih

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

This panoramic, morning-to-bedtime city tour presents an urban environment sustainably tooled to help all its inhabitants thrive. An omniscient narrator introduces readers to the city's modes of transportation, energy resources, and commercial neighborhood as well as its many places to garden and play. Larmour's charming, digitally finished watercolor and pen-and-ink illustrations present mainly bird's-eye (and occasional worm's-eye) views, but she also shows readers a rain garden, the veggie-rich kitchen of a multiracial family, and a stream teeming with wildlife. Pictures brim with examples of a community focused on renewable energy, from a charging station to a clothesline; a green roof to solar panels and wind turbines. Families might well envy the thriving "green classroom," the playground with tree-spanning bridges, and community garden. The kid-friendly text for each double-page spread ends with a question, inviting enhanced interaction with the pictures. Questions range from the open-ended ("What games will you play?") to the specific ("Can you spot a special visitor sipping from the zinnias?"). A final spread suggests "More Ways To Be Green," such as a compost bin, a rain barrel, and a window box herb garden. People depicted vary in terms of skin tone. (This book was reviewed digitally.) Exemplifying urban diversity and ecological harmony, this city will garner return visits from green-keen readers. (Picture book. 3-7) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.