by Jeannie Baker (Author) Jeannie Baker (Illustrator)
Striking mixed-media art from the creator of Mirror lights up the Sonoran Desert, revealing--through one wary boy's experience--a habitat that is anything but barren and desolate.
In a desert valley, surrounded by mountains of rock and cactus, is the tiny village the boy calls home. He never wanders far, frightened of coyotes and the dusty wilds beyond. On a visit to Grandpa's ranch, he resists the invitation to explore an area where his grandfather grew up, far from any village. The boy would rather play it safe on his tablet. But one of the creatures he fears has other plans for him, and soon the vast desert "jungle" begins to share its secrets--wonders beyond imagining.
Inspired by a research trip to the Sonoran Desert in Mexico, and illustrated with richly detailed and layered mixed-media collage, Jeannie Baker's gentle family story of awakening to nature is informed by the concept of nature deficit disorder, a subject she explores in the author's note. Her extensive afterword also illuminates the enormous biodiversity of one of the world's most magnificent--and misunderstood--habitats.
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Textured collages encourage appreciation for the Sonoran Desert in Baker's marvelous book about a child, portrayed with tan skin, who awakens to the wonders of a desert landscape. After the protagonist's backpack, and the beloved tablet inside, go missing during a visit, the young subject becomes acquainted with the environment surrounding Grandpa's childhood home in the subtropical desert. First-person narration models a growing awareness as the child becomes lost and afraid, then learns to perceive "what wonders show themselves." When an afternoon storm causes the youth to take cover in a cave, it's a chance for the narrator to encounter not only a previous source of fear, but also prehistoric art that signals further wonder. Cacti glochids nearly prick from the pages as standout three-dimensional art communicates both the dry scratchiness of the environment and its quiet biodiversity, vividly capturing a frequently misunderstood place. An author's note concludes. Ages 5-8. (May)
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