Review by Kirkus Book Review
Follow along as a squirrel gathers and hides food for the winter, finds and shares it during the wintry weather, and "plants" food for future winters. The changing leaves and the narrator's thickening coat prompt the squirrel to start caching food. Acorns, maple seeds, hazelnuts, tulip bulbs, some berries, and just a pinch of birdseed ("Birds need food for winter too") get gathered and buried in many different hiding spots for the narrator and the other squirrels to later "seek and find." When the snow covers the ground, the squirrels sniff out each hoard and return to their hole in a tree to feast. In the spring, caches that weren't found can sprout and grow, sometimes producing another food source for the next winter, in this case, some pumpkins. The meter is bouncy, but the verses were clearly written with rhyme rather than meaning or reading ease in mind: "Eeek! A dog! I dash away. / He barks as up I flee. / 'You can't catch me from down there,' / I chirp at him with glee." Leschnikoff's colorful digital mixed media illustrations highlight the cartoon narrator's larger-than-life personality, the squirrel's every facial expression and posed paw speaking volumes. Backmatter fills out the spare facts given in the text about squirrels' caching behavior, their sharing and stealing food, and nine different squirrel species found around the world. (This book was reviewed digitally.) A Saturday-morning-cartoon introduction to squirrels and scatter hoarding. (Picture book. 3-6) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.