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MAPLE AND ROSEMARY by Alison James

MAPLE AND ROSEMARY

by Alison James ; illustrated by Jennifer K. Mann

Pub Date: Feb. 28th, 2023
ISBN: 978-0-8234-4967-5
Publisher: Neal Porter/Holiday House

A lonely maple tree learns about friendship when she meets a girl named Rosemary.

The text uses a traditional storytelling style, opening with “Once there was a tree”—the same opening words as Shel Silverstein’s The Giving Tree (1964)—and concluding with a happy-ever-after ending. In between lies a simple tale that follows the maple’s thoughts and emotions, from the appearance of tan-skinned Rosemary as a friend to Rosemary’s sudden disappearance to a reconnection some years later and on into Rosemary’s elder years. The text varies in tone, by turns whimsical, didactic, and even dramatic—although still humorous—when the tree misses Rosemary: “Maple wanted the winter to cover her with snow and never ever melt.” Although the text gives Maple and her neighboring trees personalities, thoughts, and emotions, the mixed-media art offers no hint of that—hooray, no eyeball-rolling cedars! In fact, the art renders the tree’s physical transitions over seasons and years with detailed realism and vibrant color while also supporting Maple—not Rosemary—as the protagonist, making the tree more three-dimensional than animals and humans. The art’s progression of seasons makes it seem as if Rosemary suddenly leaves Maple before their first winter together, but it’s unclear why—as well as why Rosemary stays away for years. Otherwise, art, text, and layout successfully convey a sweet story of friendship that will comfort lonely or anxious children. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Quiet and quirky.

(Picture book. 4-8)