Love examines the natural world in all its varied capacities.
This lyrical exploration of the world, inspired by a poem by Sharon Olds, leans on a repeated refrain in which love asks something (a creature, thing, or idea) what it knows. Honeybees, for instance, know “the hexagon and the color gold.” The musings are philosophical, ecological, poetic, and even sociological in nature: A historian, for instance, “knows history speaks when we listen for the quietest stories among the stories.” Many spreads focus on the natural world and the animals in it, but readers also hear from farmers (including, refreshingly, a brown-skinned female farmer) and courage, which knows “the daily work of keeping on.” Things even take a cosmological turn when readers hear from the Seven Sisters, who know “the language of light.” There are references to “the elders” and “ancestors,” and many of these spreads let Mother Nature take the focus; humans (most are Black or brown skinned) are part of the land, not creatures who lord over it. Both text and art seem intentionally open-ended, leaving space for readers to extend meaning in their own ways, making it a fitting writing prompt for students (of all ages). Slightly muted, earth-toned illustrations feature flowing lines—from the multicolored furrows of a farmer’s plowed field to the rays of light in a starry night sky—that compel page turns.
A contemplative, enigmatic exploration of life on planet Earth.
(Picture book. 5-12)