Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
Mama and Baby Bear are back, enjoying a summer evening of foraging enlivened by an enthusiastic game of hide-and-seek. As they watch bats fly from their den, Baby Bear asks Mama where they go. "They are going to look for food," she replies, and the pair sets off to do likewise. On successive spreads, Mama "sniffs the warm night air" and eats berries, catches a trout, drinks water, and munches dandelions, all the while playing the familiar game. Whenever "she looks around, / Baby Bear is nowhere in sight. / ‘Where, oh where, is Baby Bear?' calls Mama." Wolff hides Baby Bear in plain sight for children to spy. Each time he reveals himself, the cub identifies both an element of his woodland habitat and an English preposition to learn about. "Here I am, Mama…. / Inside the mossy log." He also hides "up" in a birch tree, "behind" a waterfall, "between" some cattails, and "on top of" a boulder, silhouetted against the rising full moon. Mama's gentle indulgence of her cub's miniexplorations exemplifies confident parenting. With her firm "Come along now, Baby Bear," the two retrace the evening's feeding (and hiding) spots. (Wolff adds some fresh prepositions, too.) Wolff fully masters her media—linoleum prints luminously enhanced with watercolor. Children will pore over these pages, identifying creatures of woodland and meadow. Twilit enchantment. (Picture book. 2-5)
School Library Journal Starred Review
(Fri Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2017)
PreS-When night falls, the sweet and curious black bear cub and his mother go looking for food. Mama hunts and Baby Bear explores. "'Where, oh where, is Baby Bear?' calls Mama." Readers won't worry, because Wolff has hidden Baby Bear in the spread for them to find. "Here I am, Mama," he replies each time. The sky subtly darkens as they make their way through their world, each page featuring creatures that share the habitat with the bear family: the placid owl, a faun, raccoons, and otters. Here too are the mushrooms, ferns, and cattails of a woodland life, providing young viewers with a window into nature. The scope of their adventure is recalled at the end of the story, as Wolff shows the pair making their way back through the meadow, around the pond, across the river, between the birch trees, down the cliff, and into their den. The ending is predictable but comfortingBaby Bear asking, "Where, oh where, is Mama Bear" and her retort "Here I am, right beside you." Wolff uses linoleum block images printed on paper in black, which she then hand-watercolors. The juxtaposition of hard black printed lines with the subtle colors of nature at night are a perfect match to the narrative. The act of reading the book with an adult mirrors its themethe balance of independence and nurture. This iteration of Baby Bear's adventures will find success as a lap-sit or story time at home or in a library. VERDICT This title is a winnervivid illustrations, a narrative that begs for call and response, elements of seek-and-find, and an introduction to woodland nature. A must-have for all collections.Lisa Lehmuller, Paul Cuffee Maritime Charter School, Providence
Horn Book
(Sun Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2018)
Baby Bear (Baby Bear Sees Blue; Baby Bear Counts One) plays hide-and-seek with his mother in this concept book about prepositions. Mama calls, "Where, oh where, is Baby Bear?"; his answer includes a prepositional phrase: he is inside a log, behind a waterfall, etc. This installment contains all the series' hallmarks: Baby Bear's inquisitive nature; exploratory adventure; repetition in language and plot; and evocative linoleum block prints.
Kirkus Reviews
(Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Mama and Baby Bear are back, enjoying a summer evening of foraging enlivened by an enthusiastic game of hide-and-seek. As they watch bats fly from their den, Baby Bear asks Mama where they go. "They are going to look for food," she replies, and the pair sets off to do likewise. On successive spreads, Mama "sniffs the warm night air" and eats berries, catches a trout, drinks water, and munches dandelions, all the while playing the familiar game. Whenever "she looks around, / Baby Bear is nowhere in sight. / ‘Where, oh where, is Baby Bear?' calls Mama." Wolff hides Baby Bear in plain sight for children to spy. Each time he reveals himself, the cub identifies both an element of his woodland habitat and an English preposition to learn about. "Here I am, Mama…. / Inside the mossy log." He also hides "up" in a birch tree, "behind" a waterfall, "between" some cattails, and "on top of" a boulder, silhouetted against the rising full moon. Mama's gentle indulgence of her cub's miniexplorations exemplifies confident parenting. With her firm "Come along now, Baby Bear," the two retrace the evening's feeding (and hiding) spots. (Wolff adds some fresh prepositions, too.) Wolff fully masters her media—linoleum prints luminously enhanced with watercolor. Children will pore over these pages, identifying creatures of woodland and meadow. Twilit enchantment. (Picture book. 2-5)