A child delivers a paean to the natural world as experienced in a backyard.
Reminiscent of “The House That Jack Built,” this cumulative tale begins with the titular tree, then adds a climbing squirrel, followed by the tomatoes that both the squirrel and child nibble on. After several more spreads (each of which ends with the phrase “the towering tree / that reaches high / to cover me”), the text expands, with the child now focused on the sun, which casts its warmth and light over “all that I can see,” including the previously mentioned backyard features. Wolff’s lush illustrations bring a radiance to every spread, even before the text turns its attention to sunshine, and the rhyming text flows pleasantly. Young readers will enjoy picking out the bee that buzzes through every spread but the last, trailing a fuchsia plume that matches the jacket of the freckled, light-brown-skinned child. Readers can also follow the progress of a pair of robins who build a nest at the beginning of the book and, by story’s end, have three hungry chicks. The final spread flips the book for a vertical view of the massive tree, revealing even more bird life in the higher branches, suggesting further territory for the book’s child, or readers, to observe.
A gentle appreciation of the nature around us, from the ground to the sky.
(Picture book. 3-8)