It Starts with a Seed (It Starts With A)

by Laura Knowles (Author) Jennie Webber (Illustrator)

It Starts with a Seed (It Starts With A)
Reading Level: 2nd − 3rd Grade

With lyrical text, enchanting illustrations, and a beautiful fold-out scene to complete the story, this award-winning picture book takes you on a journey through the seasons and years as you follow a seed's transformation from a seedling to a sapling, then a young tree, until it becomes a large tree with its branches and roots filling the page.

As the tree grows, it is joined by well-loved woodland creatures--squirrels and rabbits, butterflies and owls--who make it their home. A rhyming poem builds page on page, echoing the rings of a growing tree. The story culminates with a foldout page showing a mature tree shedding seeds to continue the beautiful cycle of life. At the back, find the full poem and facts about the specific tree, a sycamore.

Beautiful and evocative, It Starts With a Seed is a factual story that will touch children with its simple, enchanting message of life and growth.

A 2018 Outstanding Science Trade Book for Students: K-12 (National Science Teachers Association and the Children's Book Council)

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$22.99

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Kirkus

Spare, rhyming text and detailed artwork inform readers about the life cycle of a sycamore tree, from seed to maturity--and its role in the ecosystem...While giving a general idea of how one journey from seed to tree influences an entire ecosystem, the text also emphasizes the wonder of growth--and life--itself. The tone is soothing and reverential. No hype here: understated enchantment.

School Library Journal

PreS-Gr 2--The small seed grows into a sycamore tree in this poetic natural history lesson. "As days turn to weeks, /the seedling has grown: /it's a dragonfly perch!/A ladybird throne!" The spare lines of poetry and simple-colored sketches framed on facing pages follow the tree's growth through the seasons as it spreads beneath the ground and into the air. "It's not just a tree/but a wonderful world, /full of beetles and grubs/and squirrels and birds." Except for that dragonfly and two ladybirds in an early view, the smaller creatures don't appear, but there are assorted birds and a few squirrels up above and rabbits and even two foxes beneath the grown tree. The tree's life cycle is pretty well captured, though two terms will be unfamiliar to picture book listeners/viewers/ "With each passing year/the trunk builds up its rings" offers a teaching moment. The reference to ."..their leaf-laden, /bark-bound arboreal home" is heavier going than the rest of the poem. Imported from England (hence the grubs and ladybirds), this offering concludes with a single page printed with the poem that folds out with a double-page view of the seeds and realistic leaves through the seasons. These are labeled with added facts about the sycamore tree. "A single tree can produce as many as 10,000 seeds a year." VERDICT A pleasant bit of early STEM material, perfect for prompting discussion and explanation.--Margaret Bush, Simmons College, Boston

Copyright 2017 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes

 
Classification
Non-fiction
ISBN-13
9781910277263
Lexile Measure
660
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Words & Pictures
Publication date
September 05, 2017
Series
It Starts with a
BISAC categories
JNF042000 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Poetry | General
JNF037040 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Science & Nature | Trees & Forests
Library of Congress categories
Trees
Growth
Seeds
Sycamores

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