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Sun flower lion /

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York, NY : Greenwillow Books, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, 2019Edition: First editionDescription: unpagedContent type:
  • text
  • still image
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780062866103
  • 0062866109
  • 9780062866110
  • 0062866117
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • [E] 23
LOC classification:
  • PZ7.H389 Suc 2019
Summary: Invites the reader to see the sun, bright as a flower, a flower on a hill that looks like a lion, a lion that dreams of flowers as big as the sun, and more.
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Star ratings
    Average rating: 5.0 (1 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Standard Loan (Child Access) Bookmobile Easy Fiction Bookmobile Book HENKES (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610022543792
Standard Loan (Child Access) Hayden Library Easy Fiction Hayden Library Book HENKES (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610022543800
Standard Loan (Child Access) Rathdrum Library Easy Fiction Rathdrum Library Book HENKES (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610022543644
Standard Loan (Child Access) Spirit Lake Library Easy Fiction Spirit Lake Library Book HENKES (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Checked out 04/30/2024 50610022543586
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:



"As brilliant as can be."--Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"A simple but thought-provoking story."--Booklist (starred review)

"Endearing."--Horn Book (starred review)

"A must-have for all collections."--School Library Journal (starred review)

A sun. A flower. And a lion. With three visual motifs, three colors, and fewer than 200 words,, renowned Caldecott Medal winner and #1 New York Times-bestseller Kevin Henkes cracks open the wide world and the youngest child's endless imagination. This irresistible picture book is a must-have for every reader and every family.

On a warm morning, a little lion sleeps under a sun that shines so brightly, it looks like a flower. He dreams the flower is as big as the sun. He dreams the flower is a cookie. He lets his imagination soar.

Caldecott Medal winner Kevin Henkes uses simple shapes, limited colors, and a pitch-perfect text to tell Lion's story in this transcendent picture book. Sun Flower Lion introduces emerging readers to short chapters, action verbs, and adjectives, while bright illustrations transform simple shapes into something magical.

Sun Flower Lion will shine at story time and bedtime and for young children just learning how to read on their own.

Invites the reader to see the sun, bright as a flower, a flower on a hill that looks like a lion, a lion that dreams of flowers as big as the sun, and more.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

Simple words and repeating forms draw beginning readers into this iterative volume by Henkes (Summer Song). Its central visual element, a circle with a ruffled edge, could signify the sun, a flower, or a lion with a mane--and here, it's all three. Divided into six short chapters, the story's sentences relate the three objects to each other. First, readers meet the sun: "The sun is in the sky./ It is shining./ It is as bright as a flower." In chapter two, a ruffled circle appears with a stem and leaves; it's a bloom that "looks like a little lion." In chapter three, the motif forms the head of a stumpy feline ("He smells the flower./ He warms himself in the sun") who dreams, wakes, and runs home. Readers see the hill, but not the traveling lion ("Can you see him?/ No, you can't./ He is running too fast"). Yellow spreads convey warmth and light, while gray, hand-inked blades of grass cover the hill. Signlike artwork and straightforward text fit together as neatly as building blocks in this lighthearted reading exercise. Ages 4--8. (Sept.)

Booklist Review

Masterfully employing brush and ink, with a striking color palette limited to yellow, black, white, and gray, Henkes creates a simple but thought-provoking story. Using panel illustrations, the book is divided into chapters, setting the pace of the narrative and helping the reader understand comparisons between items. The first chapter consists of two panels, both showing the sun, "as bright as a flower." Chapter two introduces the flower--composed of the same core shape and colors as the sun--while the text makes the first mention of the lion. Chapter three brings it all together, as a lion--whose head also bears the same design as the sun and flower--sniffs the flower and warms himself in the sunlight. In chapter four, the panels now have scalloped edges because the lion is dreaming, the curves again echoing the design of the lion's mane, the flower's petals, and the sun's rays. Chapter five begins the ending progression, and by chapter six, the lion is home with his family. He runs, eats, and goes to sleep surrounded by safety and love, which results in an image of pure happiness. A perfect book for storytime reading or family bedtime sharing, this is completely accessible for the youngest readers, while providing an intriguing visual and print literacy experience for older ones.

Horn Book Review

Meet the sun, "as bright as a flower"; a flower that looks like a lion; and a lion, who sees the flower and dreams about a field of them. But these dream-flowers are delicious cookies, and the lion eats them all. Waking up hungry, he runs home to have supper and sleep snugly with his family. Divided into six brief chapters that follow the lion from hilltop to home, this is a perfectly paced picture book for preschoolers that will also be ideal for emerging readers. With simple shapes (the rounded shapes for the sun, the flower, and the lion are the same but with facial features on the lion) and uncluttered, sunny-yellow illustrations that mirror the text, the book includes a mixture of short declarative and interrogative sentences, the latter directed at the audience. In a couple of instances, Henkes even answers his own questions, one with gentle humor: "The lion runs home. Can you see him? No, you can't. He is running too fast." The large, clean, black type is easy to read, always centered in white space. Sentences are full of repetition and rhythm: the flower "is growing on the hill...The lion is running up the hill." It's an endearing, seemingly simple story with a wide-eyed and memorable protagonist, whose adventures will delight preschoolers and support and encourage those taking first steps toward reading. Julie Danielson September/October 2020 p.63(c) Copyright 2020. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Kirkus Book Review

A sun, a flower, and a lion. They look similar, no? Introduced in a wordless panel before the title page, the three figures bear at least two shapes in common. They're also the same combination of warm yellow and (somehow just as warm) white, outlined in thick black line that pops against the muted yellow background. The text, divided into six short chapters, goes on to introduce the figures in isolation: "This is the sun. / Can you see it?" the narrator asks before going on to proclaim that the sun "is as bright as a flower." When the flower is introduced, it's compared to a lion. The lion? He isn't compared to anything but instead smells the flower and warms himself in the sun. In the next chapter, the lion dreams that the flowers are sun-sized cookies. He wakes up hungry and runs home as fast as he can. Can readers spot him on the page? Using a vocabulary of fewer than 60 words and their variants--and a visual vocabulary of even fewer shapes and colors--Henkes creates an impeccably designed story that's rewarding for toddlers and early readers alike. The repetitive structure and tone call to mind the playful simplicity of Mem Fox and Judy Horacek's Where Is the Green Sheep? (2004). With imagination at its center, this participatory read-aloud also cleverly introduces the concept of simile ("It looks like a lion") and metaphor ("The flowers are cookies"). As brilliant as can be. (Picture book. 3-6) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Author notes provided by Syndetics

Kevin Henkes was born in Racine, Wis. in 1960 and graduated from the University of Wisconsin at Madison. One of four children in his family, Henkes grew up with aspirations of being an artist. As a junior in high school, one of Henkes's teachers awakened his interest in writing. Falling in love with both writing and drawing, Henkes realized that he could do both at the same time as a children's book author and illustrator.

At the age of 19, Henkes went to New York City to get his first book, All Alone, published. Since that time, he has written and illustrated dozens of picture books including Chrysanthemum, Protecting Marie, and A Weekend with Wendell. A recurring character in several of Henkes's books is Lily, an outrageous, yet delightful, individualist. Lily finds herself the center of attention in the books Chester's Way, Julius, the Baby of the World, and Lily's Purple Plastic Purse.

A Weekend With Wendell was named Children's Choice Book by the Children's Book Council in 1986. He recieved the Elizabeth Burr Award for Words of Stone in 1993. Owen was named a Caldicott Honor in 1994. The Year of Billy Miller was named a Newbery Honor book in 2014.

(Bowker Author Biography)

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