Both Are Needed
My best friend has four legs with four paws, shiny chocolate brown fur and a sense of hearing that can differentiate between the sound of the opening of the refrigerator fruit, vegetable, or cheese drawers. When expressing joy she zooms like a roadrunner in the house or yard, leaps like a gazelle through snow drifts, and jumps straight up in the air off her four paws. She is not much of a conversationalist, but she knows I know what every sigh, whimper, bark, and pointed look means.
In moments of quiet and aloneness, I have witnessed some remarkable occurrences, but nothing is as welcome as the sound of her claws clicking on tile or wood floors to find me or the jingle of her collar tags as she walks or runs next to me. In
Sometimes It’s Nice To Be Alone
(
Neal Porter Books
,
Holiday House
, February 14, 2023) written by Amy Hest with illustrations by Philip Stead readers are soothed by the contentment of being alone and awakened to the joy of shared experiences. Rhythmic text presents the solace found in ordinary activities but also elevates those through imagination coupled with exquisite artwork.
Sometimes it’s nice to
be alone.
Just you, eating your
cookie, alone.
On the other hand if unexpectedly a friend appears, eating a cookie with them is really quite nice. What if you happen to be reading a book alone and suddenly you are not alone? It is a different feeling to be reading a book with a friend there. It is as if you both have stepped into the pages of the story.
Do you remember days when it is just you outside tumbling on the grass, somersaulting to your heart’s content? Then a voice asks to tumble with you. You and your friend are now a team of tumblers.
Head down and legs and feet pumping, you might be bicycling up, up and up hills all alone. With arms stretched out and feet kicking, you might be dancing among a whirlwind of colorful leaves in the autumn all alone. When a friend is with you, the downward slope is more thrilling and the fall frolic is more exhilarating.
Doing something alone is one kind of special. Doing the same thing with a friend is another kind of wonderful. What will you do alone next?
The writing in this book by
Amy Hest
is marvelous. The title text begins each lyrical portion. This is followed by a description each time of what the child is doing. We then read the question about the appearance of a friend. Each reply to this question begins with the same seven words. This establishes a cadence and participatory invitation to readers.
The mastery of this writing is that certain words are altered as the narrative progresses. The descriptions become more vivid and sensory. Here is a passage.
Just you, alone, on a
seaside walk, making
big footprints, and heel
and toe prints, at the
edge of the choppy sea.
The pictorial interpretation of the text by artist
Philip Stead
is superb. We are introduced to his limited color palette on the open dust jacket. His use of primary…
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