Another great review of WHEN THE WIND BLEW (from Publishers Weekly this time)!
A follow-up to If the Shoe Fits (illustrated by Karla
Firehammer, 2001) finds the old woman—not so old but cheery and
buxom—and her many children solving a few dilemmas for other nursery
rhyme denizens.
The footwear that is their home is quite a fancy shoe, with a lamp
affixed to the end of its curled tip. The opening spread sets up the
entire story with its panoramic view of shoe, tree with “cradle and
all,” fields, town, castle and hill with well atop.
The wind rocks the cradle so wildly that the wee tot is tumbled out
onto the shoe, to be gently caught by the children, who try right away
to put baby and cradle back. The tree from which it fell is now
festooned with mittens, and the children soon find the
desolate, mittenless kittens. As they go along, they find Mary’s lamb,
Bo Peep’s crook, Jack’s candlestick, and Jack and Jill’s pail (among
other items) and eventually restore them to their rightful places. It is
all told in verse rhymed with grace—verve,
even—and illustrated with soft, ballooning figures. The many children
of the shoe have round heads and button features, and each is clad in
the garb of various and sundry nations and ethnicities. Perspectives
swoop and change with the rhythm. There is a moral
about “examin[ing] the cost / Of constantly grasping for things that
are lost,” but it doesn’t much get in the way.
Children who know the nursery rhymes will enjoy seeing them in a new
context, and children who do not can enjoy the rollicking action anyway.
(Picture book. 4-7)
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