
PreS-Gr 3—A gorgeously illustrated, simply told, and emotionally complex story about anger and grief. When a friendless, grumpy goat arrives at Sunny Acres, the other animals don't know why he is so ornery and they try to befriend him. However, rebukes come swift and hard. Goat kicks, scowls, and stares at the ground. It is only when he finds a lone dandelion on a hill-painted full page, as majestically as a Van Gogh sunflower-that his anger starts to unravel. Meanwhile, Cow, the sheep, and the pigs are undeterred by his rudeness, demonstrating their power of perseverance and forgiveness, and he begins to accept their invitations. However, one fateful day Goat watches helplessly as his beloved flower blows away. Despondent and in a state of mourning, he is cared for by his friends, each in their own way. Understated writing with superb pacing and luminous and warm oil paintings using a vibrant brushwork style result in a story to ponder and pore over. The simple truths of the world's beauty and friends' loyalty are healing. Sharon Dennis Wyeth's Something Beautiful (Random, 1998), Philip C. Stead's A Sick Day for Amos McGhee (Roaring Brook, 2010), and Arthur Geisert's The Giant Seed (Enchanted Lion, 2012)-also featuring the heroism of the humble dandelion-would all pair stunningly.—Sara Lissa Paulson, The American Sign Language and English Lower School, New York City
Anyone who's done storytimes knows that there can never be enough farm animal books. In this one, Grumpy Goat makes Sunny Acres Farm an unpleasant place to live for the friendly animals: "He was hungry. He was grumpy. He didn't want to share." Goat knocks down fences, chases away the playful pigs, and kicks up his heels at Cow. He eats his way through the farm and partway up a hill before coming across a little yellow flower whose petals shine brightly against the backdrop of the radiant sun that dominates the page. Because the flower reminds him of something, he stops to ponder it, then begins caring for it. Over the next few days, the other animals slowly approach and find that Goat's nature has sweetened. When the flower blows away on the wind, Goat is inconsolable, "but his friends stayed close and visited often." The story, initially a humorous one about an irascible goat, evolves into a tale about the power of caring for others, as the goat cares for the flower and his new friends care for him. Helquist's acrylic and oil paintings are luscious, conveying both the shifting moods of the animals and a gorgeous landscape with rolling clouds that may entice both children and grownups to go outside and find a dandelion, too. susan dove lempke
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