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THE MOON'S FIRST FRIENDS by Susanna Leonard Hill

THE MOON'S FIRST FRIENDS

How the Moon Met the Astronauts from Apollo 11

by Susanna Leonard Hill ; illustrated by Elisa Paganelli

Pub Date: June 4th, 2019
ISBN: 978-14926-5680-7
Publisher: Sourcebooks Jabberwocky

The Moon, lonely for so long, welcomes at last a pair of visitors from the planet below.

It’s a long wait—dinosaurs come and go, and likewise woolly mammoths; the pyramids rise; the first balloons and gliders appear; a chimp in a Mercury capsule waves from orbit—but at long last two spacecraft stacked atop a huge multistage rocket make the journey: “They’re actually coming!” The Moon, a light blue orb in Paganelli’s pastel-toned scenes with big, lashed eyes and pink cheeks, watches in delight, warmly welcomes the two astronauts who land, and gives them gifts of rocks and dust (they in turn leave a plaque and a brightly colored flag) when it’s time to go. “Come back anytime!” Hill neglects mention of the earlier and later Apollo visits but enhances her lunarcentric commemoration of Apollo 11 with a detailed if idiosyncratic account of that one and QR codes leading to actual sound clips of the countdown and Neil Armstrong’s first remark. Appended notes on the moon, NASA, spacesuits, and the Saturn V rocket also help to give the historic mission some background.

One of a flurry of semicentennial tributes, set at least a bit apart by its unusual point of view.

(Informational picture book. 5-7)