Various families with children take a rhyming journey through a forest in musician Ginalina’s picture book.
Animals are shown to be worth careful attention in this conservation-minded celebration in which adults and kids encounter a forest packed with birds, leaves, flowers, berries, foxes, and more. Humans’ interactions with the world are peaceful; they scrape in the dirt with sticks, play guitar beneath trees, pick berries, count tree rings, and weave mats from grass. Short stanzas in readable capital letters introduce readers to hemlock, alder, and a “ruby-throated hummingbird” as well as tidbits about nesting habits, food, and life patterns in the woods, but the art also does its share of education. Wills’ lineless, high-contrast illustrations—with flat perspective in coral, dark green, and yellow—mimic the appearance of vintage papercuts and woodcuts while providing relevant identifying features of birds and leaves. The meticulous images lack some of the fluidity, chaos, and mess of the natural world, but pleasant visual echoes underline connectedness: eggs in a nest resemble white bunnies in their burrow, and children poking at the rings of a tree match the shapes of birds drinking water. Featured humans are Asian and appear thin and light-skinned with dark hair, and a range of parent and elder figures hint at diversity in family configurations.
A delicately illustrated, enthusiastic, and informative tour of woodland life for young readers.