Many people are convinced that the best stories are ones that are packed with a huge cast of characters, a constantly changing backdrop, a busy back story, and a great deal of drama. To be sure such stories are gratifying and engaging, but smaller, quieter tales can be incredibly rich and rewarding as well. Today's picture book story is just such a tale. The characters are insects, the setting never changes, and the events that unfold are not packed with grandiose spectacles. Instead, we are given a gem of a story that takes us into a small world where powerful and meaningful things happen on a small scale.
Du Iz Tak?
Du Iz Tak?
Carson Ellis
Picture Book
For ages 5 and up
Candlewick Press, 2016, 978-0-7636-6530-2
One day two elegant insects see that a green plant is
growing out of the ground and they wonder what it is. A while later three young
beetles turn up and the green thing has grown. They too would like to know what
the plant is. The beetles climb to the first layer of leaves and they want to
go higher to the second set but they cannot reach. They decide to go and ask
Icky the caterpillar if they can borrow a ladder. The kindly fellow goes and
gets his very long ladder and he props it up against the plant.
With the ladder
in place, the three beetles can now climb as high as they like, and when they
get up into the higher branches of the plant– which is quite a way up now
because the plant is still growing - they decide to build a tree house. Actually
they build three tree houses at different levels, and life is wonderful. Then a
huge spider builds a web around the houses and the plant, and the beetles can
do nothing about the invader who has taken over their home.
In this
wonderful picture book, several backyard stories featuring insect characters
unfold before our eyes. The insects speak their own language, which is not
surprising when you think about it, but luckily we can figure out much of what
they are saying and we have no trouble understanding what is going on. What is
delightful about this story is that though the main characters are insects, and
though the setting in the book is the same one throughout the tale, the story
we witness is rich, charming, and satisfying.
1 comment:
Enjoyed this review Marya. Want to read this book.
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