Blue

Suzanne Kaufman

Book - 2025

"A child bonds with a blue heron, and they share a dreamlike friendship"--

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Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
New York : Little, Brown and Company 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Suzanne Kaufman (author)
Physical Description
pages cm
Audience
Ages 4-8.
ISBN
9780316311663
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The companionable relationship between a human protagonist and a blue heron forms the buoying heart of this wonder-filled work from Kaufman (All Are Welcome). First-person narration begins at daybreak as a brown-skinned child sporting galoshes carefully approaches regal avian Blue: "I tiptoe,/ rush.../ and pause...// ...echoing Blue's stillness." Before long, the unlikely pair frolics among a shoreline's reeds, rejoicing in play ("We are wild./ We are free..."). Multimedia art has a loose, calligraphic quality as scenes cast in inky blues are illuminated with light emanating first from a warm, buttery sun and then a glowing, oversize moon. At sunset, "with an incredible leap and a mighty flap,/ Blue takes flight," leading to a few hopeful beats and a starry, soaring adventure for both creatures that lasts until the child's human body demands descent ("Up high, the air is thin and cold"). When it's time to "say good night/ but not goodbye," visual details (a costume, a mobile, a stuffy) tucked into closing domestic scenes leave the evening's events open to interpretation, making for a meditative wish-fulfillment fantasy that leans into both adventure and security. Ages 4--8. (June)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A young child frolics by the seashore with a strikingly beautiful bird. One morning, a tan-skinned, curly-haired youngster spots a great blue heron (an uncommon species whose inclusion will interest young readers) through the window. Decorations adorning the bedroom make it clear that the protagonist has long wished for an encounter like this one. After the child approaches slowly, "echoing Blue's stillness," the pair spend the day chasing, shrieking, and doing some tastefully depicted skinny-dipping, all sensorily described with a "swoosh, swoop, and quiet settle." Graceful and oversize Blue isn't overly anthropomorphized, making the duo's interactions feel fittingly "wild" and "free." When night arrives, Blue flies away but grants the hopeful child's wish by returning to carry the little one high in the indigo sky, "over campfires and shooting stars." Back home at last, the child hugs a stuffed heron and begins to "dream of meeting again." The poetic, evocative narrative captures a potent mix of excitement and yearning that may leave readers wondering whether the extraordinary journey really took place or whether it was only in the bird-loving child's imagination. Kaufman boldly leaves it to readers to decide. No matter what they choose, her illustrations are delightful. Her compositions are masterful, with whimsically sketchy sun-dappled daytime vignettes of the friends in the fizzy surf contrasting with ethereal, star-studded double-page spreads that feel appropriately endless. A whimsical, luminous romp.(Picture book. 3-9) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.