A youngster deeply in touch with nature explains how to hug each part of a forest.
The titular question may seem confounding at first, but the tiny narrator, who has brown skin and two coiled hair buns, breezily explains that OF COURSE you can hug a forest. All you need is a forest (check) and two arms (“Here are two. One. Two”). But you can’t hug a whole forest all at once. You need to hug each part individually. In order to hug the air (which whispers, “Whisha, whisha”), “Just open your arms, / lift up your chin, / and breathe in all the way down to your toes.” The meditative tot explains how to hug a leaf, a flower, and even a stream. But how do you hug a trail? “Just open your arms, / lean into each footfall, / and let the ground guide you, / there and back again.” The lulling, quiet text washes over readers, following a repetitive structure (“How do you hug…?” “Like this”) that brings comfort and stability. Hevron’s cozy illustrations are painted directly on a wooden canvas, with wood grain peeking through delightfully in places. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
Plenty of opportunity for stillness and nature appreciation, wherever you may be.
(Picture book. 2-6)