North, South, East, West

by Margaret Wise Brown

Other authorsGreg Pizzoli (Illustrator)
Hardcover, 2017

Status

Available

Call number

J2M.0429

Publication

Harper (HarperCollins) (First Edition)

Pages

40

Description

Follows the journey of a little bird who flies to the north, south, east, and west to decide which direction she likes best.

Description

This poetic tale from the author of Goodnight Moon is no less fresh for having lain unpublished for so long. A mother bird prepares her nestling to fly away to a home of her own, teaching her “to fly above and below the storms,/ and to glide on the strength of the wind.” The young bird wonders, “When I fly away, which is best?/ North, South, East, or West?” Pizzoli (Good Night Owl) uses friendly paint-box hues for his plump birds and forest trees, superimposing simple, fuzzy-edged shapes like layers of tissue paper. The young bird’s light blue wings, where they overlie her red body, turn dusky lilac; leaves turn darker green. The bird’s search takes her to an icy blue North (too cold), a lush South (too hot) and a sunny West, “but the East was home,” and when she returns to build a nest there, her life comes full circle as her nestlings repeat her words. Exploring both the urge to explore and the desire for the familiar, Brown’s story speaks directly to longings at the core of childhood. Ages 4–8.

Collection

Barcode

3836

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

40 p.; 10.25 x 8.75 inches

ISBN

0060262788 / 9780060262785

User reviews

LibraryThing member AbigailAdams26
A little bird is ready to fly off in this story from Margaret Wise Brown, author of such childhood classics as Goodnight Moon and The Runaway Bunny, but in what direction should she fly? Her wise mother doesn't give her the answer, so the bird tries all the cardinal directions, until finally she
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realizes that home is best.

A sweet story about exploring the world, before realizing that the home you left behind is where you're really meant to be, the text of North, South, East, West was taken from a previously unpublished story from this famous author - Brown died in 1952 - and was paired with simple, clean-looking illustrations from Greg Pizzoli. I can't say I had a terribly strong reaction to either text or artwork, but I would imagine that some readers will find in this book an engaging reassurance tale. For my part, I wish more information about the story itself - was it contained in Brown's papers? who found it, and decided to publish it? - was included in some sort of foreword.
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LibraryThing member melodyreads
Calm and soothing tale ...

Rating

½ (12 ratings; 3.5)

Call number

J2M.0429
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