A fall ball for all
(2022)

Fiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Lerner Publishing Group, 2022
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781728466408 MWT15185200, 1728466407 15185200
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Audisee® eBooks with Audio combine professional narration and sentence highlighting for an engaging read aloud experience! On the verge of winter, the autumn wind issues an invitation: "Come one, come all to the annual windfall ball!" Join all the animals in this beautifully illustrated rhyming picture book as they gather for the autumn wind's harvest in preparation for the long winter. "As the winds of autumn start to blow, an invitation sails on the breeze to all the animals inviting them to attend the annual Windfall Ball. Excitement mounts as the time draws near; everyone primps and preens to look their best while the wind rounds up a sumptuous feast. On party night, the woods are filled with song and dance. A windfall feast wraps up the night as the animals head to their places of winter rest. This wonderful ode to fall has a pleasant, rhyming text that reads well aloud. Its placement swoops and meanders through the illustrations like the wind. Fedele's art perfectly captures the scene of a northern woods. Her spreads are replete with the golds, browns, reds, greens, yellows, and orange, while the animals are a delightful mix of realistic and anthropomorphic. A stream of fall leaves blows through each vignette and magically ties all the scenes together. An afterword contains a definition of the term windfall and an author's note on the animals depicted. VERDICT A poetic tribute to autumn winds and woodland animals. Great for storytime or one-on-one sharing."-School Library Journal "Leaf invitations sweep through the forest, declaring to the animals: 'You're invited, one and all, to the annual Windfall Ball!' Even as the cooler weather approaches, 'Geese postponed their grand migration,/ Bears and bats, their hibernation.' The highly anticipated event is a windfall (Swenson defines the word as 'fruit or other crops blown down by the wind' and 'an unexpected gift or good fortune'). Fedele captures the blazing colors of the season as the flutter of crimson, yellow, and orange leaves drift throughout the pages like butterflies. In the windfall's wake, the animals-badgers, bears, raccoons, and more-eagerly gather 'cranberries, chestnuts, corn, and plums,/ Sunflowers, daisies, chrysanthemums,' for their winter dens. The bounties of autumn are on full display in this cozy story."-Publishers Weekly "A fluttering line of autumn leaves flying across every double-page spread announces the wind's presence. Autumn Wind is a character here, inviting all the forest animals to the 'annual Windfall Ball.' The event is not just a night's entertainment, but the opportunity for the animals to gather the food they each need for the long winter ahead. As Swenson explains to adults at the end, a 'windfall' can be 'fruit or other crops blown down by the wind' or 'an unexpected gift or good fortune.' As part of the harvest season, in the northern woods of the United States, the author's home, the wind does its natural part in bringing down foods that can be eaten, or gathered and stored according to their needs, by the region's animals, some hibernating, some able to live through harsh winters, and some who migrate to southern areas. This fanciful depiction in rhyme of the invisible wind that affects many animals with its hospitality scans well. 'Then Autumn Wind began to dance- / It breezed, / it blew, / it puffed, / it pranced. / Beckoning both big and small / To join in step at the Windfall Ball.' There are plenty of animals to spot in the soft, yet vibrant mixed media illustrations that combine the use of watercolor, tempera, and colored pencils with digital retouching: rabbits, bears, raccoons, elk, and quail, among them. This satisfying book for the fall season emphasizes the interconnectivity of nature. Soothing at bedtime yet with enough substance for an autumn group storytime."-Kirkus Reviews

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