by Michelle Schaub (Author) Blanca Gómez (Illustrator)
A spring storm brings the chance to build a rain garden in this charming, actionable picture book about protecting our waterways.
Pitter-patter, splutter-splatter, drizzle turns to roar. . . . DOWNPOUR!
But where do all those raindrops go? Dirty stormwater runoff can cause big problems, polluting rivers, ponds, and waterways. So this classroom plans and builds a rain garden, collecting excess water in barrels, creating paths for waterflow with stones and bricks, and planting native flowers and grasses that help the water percolate and invite wildlife to feed and pollinate.
With Michelle Schaub’s lively, engaging storytelling, and Blanca Gómez’s bright, beguiling illustrations, A Place for Rain provides an upbeat and actionable approach to an important environmental issue, and empowers readers with the tools to reduce pollution, diminish flooding, and create a habitat for wildlife. Informational backmatter includes instructions and resources for readers to build their own rain garden.
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This upbeat problem-solving story starts as rain begins to fall in a neighborhood portrayed with colorblock buildings. Gómez (Very Good Hats) renders children of various skin tones in the windows of a yellow school bus, like wooden dolls gazing out at the downpour. Elsewhere, a child pedestrian with brown skin gazes into a gutter, where "oil and grime and mud" from the street wash into waterways, "clogging rivers, ponds, and lakes." Is there a way to "lessen all this mess? YES!" reads a page showing a queue of schoolchildren alongside a rain-slickered adult. The kids roll a rain barrel to catch water from the school's downspout ("Water saved for droughty days"), then engineer a stream for the overflow to run into a "spongy, pooling place." The saucer of land is next planted with native varieties that have "tough, thick roots" and "filter out that grime and soil" as the rain percolates into the ground and attracts new wildlife. Schaub (Kindness is a Kite String) uses onomatopoeia ("Plink. Plip. Plop.") and emphatic statements ("FLOOD!") to convey the feel of water's halt and flow in this low-tech guide to rain gardens. Further instructions conclude. Ages 4-8. Author's agent: Lisa Amstutz, Storm Literary. Illustrator's agent: Rebecca Sherman, Writers House. (Mar.)
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