Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
(Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
A narrator whispers sweet assurances of belonging in the ear of a beloved, invoking animals' analogous habitats and hollows to bring the comforting ascriptions powerfully home.Watercolor illustrations utilize every gradation of gray to achieve astonishing, soft specificity and alternatively show human houses and animal homes in the natural world. Mellow reds, greens, and yellows crop up here and there, serving as keen testaments to the power of placement in the scenes they depict. Lovingly constructed, reliable rhymes, with pleasing pendular swings, might cause listeners to hug themselves tightly and smile. "And the trees belong in the wild wood / and the deer belong in their shade, / and the birds belong so safe and good / and warm in the nests they've made." Animals enjoy habitations all their own, sublime places described with crystalline clarity: streams skirted with cattails, red and gold desert rocks, canyons blanketed with sage, dune grasses, and a stone wall surrounded by clover. Cursive script (intrinsically personal and unique) accompanies lines directed at a listening human audience and images of human houses. One could easily improvise a quick melody and sing these words as a lullaby.This lyrical picture book will draw readers under its soft wing, lulling children with its velveteen artwork and assured affirmations of each creature's special nook in such a spectacularly varied world. (Picture book. 2-6)
ALA Booklist
(Sat Jul 01 00:00:00 CDT 2017)
Gentle, lilting lines accompany soft, richly textured scenes in this lullaby to feeling at home. "The stars belong in the deep night sky / and the moon belongs there too," begins Clark's undulating poem, and every few verses, she adds a variation on the refrain "and I belong here with you." Interspersed among these sections are meditations on the places that animals, plants, and natural elements belong, and as the scope of Clark's poem grows broader, so does the concept of belonging. By the end, rather than being next to a parent or in a house, belonging comfortingly encompasses the love of family or the mere feeling that you are in the right place. Arsenault's beautifully muted watercolor and pastel illustrations are mostly fuzzy grays with occasional glowing pastel highlights and bright accents, and in passages where Clark addresses "you," the tiny cursive paragraphs appear on images of homes of all types, each emitting a warm glow. The cozy message, gaze-worthy illustrations, and hypnotic lines mesh seamlessly together into an inviting, eloquent, and snuggly bedtime read.
Kirkus Reviews
(Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
A narrator whispers sweet assurances of belonging in the ear of a beloved, invoking animals' analogous habitats and hollows to bring the comforting ascriptions powerfully home.Watercolor illustrations utilize every gradation of gray to achieve astonishing, soft specificity and alternatively show human houses and animal homes in the natural world. Mellow reds, greens, and yellows crop up here and there, serving as keen testaments to the power of placement in the scenes they depict. Lovingly constructed, reliable rhymes, with pleasing pendular swings, might cause listeners to hug themselves tightly and smile. "And the trees belong in the wild wood / and the deer belong in their shade, / and the birds belong so safe and good / and warm in the nests they've made." Animals enjoy habitations all their own, sublime places described with crystalline clarity: streams skirted with cattails, red and gold desert rocks, canyons blanketed with sage, dune grasses, and a stone wall surrounded by clover. Cursive script (intrinsically personal and unique) accompanies lines directed at a listening human audience and images of human houses. One could easily improvise a quick melody and sing these words as a lullaby.This lyrical picture book will draw readers under its soft wing, lulling children with its velveteen artwork and assured affirmations of each creature's special nook in such a spectacularly varied world. (Picture book. 2-6)