Publisher's Hardcover ©2020 | -- |
Animals. Juvenile fiction.
Compassion. Juvenile fiction.
Friendship. Juvenile fiction.
Animals. Fiction.
Compassion. Fiction.
Friendship. Fiction.
Starred Review One quiet day, when a boy (the narrator) and his friend Esther have nothing to do, they find a dead bumblebee. Esther takes the lead, grabbing a shovel and burying the bee in a cigar-box coffin, while the boy recites a little poem over the grave. They're so moved that they decide to look for more dead things to bury, with help from Esther's little brother. Next, they find a dead mouse and give him a solemn burial, thinking, "We were the nicest people in the world." Soon they start an animal funeral business, burying a pet hamster, a rooster, a blackbird, and even roadkill: a hedgehog and a hare. Along the way, the children talk about death itself. The narrative concludes, "The next day we did something else. Something completely different." First published in Sweden, the book has a childlike tone that is reverent, winsome, and matter-of-fact. The kids' attitudes toward death differ realistically according to their ages and personalities. Sometimes amusing and sometimes moving, Nilsson's simply written text is always satisfying. Eriksson's sensitive, beguiling pencil drawings with color washes brighten every double-page spread. Like Margaret Wise Brown's The Dead Bird (1958, 2016), this pitch-perfect book shows children dealing with death in their own ways and then moving on.
Starred Review for Kirkus ReviewsThree children spend a day burying dead creatures in this New Zealand import originally from Sweden.This perspicacious observation of how children copy adult behavior in their play is also a hilarious spoof on the overtly pious funeral industry. Esther, her younger brother Puttie, and the unnamed narrator have "nothing to do" one day. Finding a dead bumblebee, Esther declares they must bury it, but the narrator is leery of touching it, being afraid of death, and so instead offers to write the poem: "A dear little life in the hand / Suddenly gone, deep in the sand." Little Puttie, completely in the dark about death, is upset when Esther tells him he too will die when he is "an old man." "But Mummy and Daddy will be so sad," he whimpers. After the success of the bumblebee interment, Esther is enthused about burying "all the poor dead animals," and the children start "Funerals Ltd.," phoning neighbors for dead pets and scouring the bushes and byways for roadkill. The story cleverly—and tenderly—pivots near its end, giving it a touching depth (with a twist). Eriksson's keenly observed illustrations include full-page and double-page spreads as well as spots, and they are as wickedly hilarious as the text in their understated expressions and details. An abundance of soft springlike colors present a visually humorous juxtaposition to the morbid theme. The children are illustrated as white.Dark and hilarious. (Fiction. 7-12)
Horn Book (Wed Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2020)One day we had nothing to do. We wanted some fun. Then Esther found a bumblebee.
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)Three children spend a day burying dead creatures in this New Zealand import originally from Sweden.This perspicacious observation of how children copy adult behavior in their play is also a hilarious spoof on the overtly pious funeral industry. Esther, her younger brother Puttie, and the unnamed narrator have "nothing to do" one day. Finding a dead bumblebee, Esther declares they must bury it, but the narrator is leery of touching it, being afraid of death, and so instead offers to write the poem: "A dear little life in the hand / Suddenly gone, deep in the sand." Little Puttie, completely in the dark about death, is upset when Esther tells him he too will die when he is "an old man." "But Mummy and Daddy will be so sad," he whimpers. After the success of the bumblebee interment, Esther is enthused about burying "all the poor dead animals," and the children start "Funerals Ltd.," phoning neighbors for dead pets and scouring the bushes and byways for roadkill. The story cleverly—and tenderly—pivots near its end, giving it a touching depth (with a twist). Eriksson's keenly observed illustrations include full-page and double-page spreads as well as spots, and they are as wickedly hilarious as the text in their understated expressions and details. An abundance of soft springlike colors present a visually humorous juxtaposition to the morbid theme. The children are illustrated as white.Dark and hilarious. (Fiction. 7-12)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Nilsson and Eriksson bring a whiff of Scandinavian noir to this lengthy, small-format picture book. After an encounter with -something sad and tragic--a dead bee-Esther buries the insect, then makes a pronouncement. -Someone unselfish must make sure all these dead things get buried,- she tells the narrator, a boy in a plaid shirt. So they start a business, Funerals Ltd. The boy is a reluctant undertaker but a good writer (-There are lots of words inside me-), and he contributes a short poem for each funeral (-Farewell Harold, wee Harold so bold-). Esther solicits new business, sometimes with startling cynicism--We will never forget him. That-s what we-re paid for!- Deftly translated by Marshall, the text laces honest consideration of a difficult subject with winningly mordant humor. Lindgren Award-winner Eriksson-s (
Starred Review ALA Booklist (Sun Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2020)
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
Horn Book (Wed Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2020)
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
"One summer's day we started a business called Funerals Ltd., to help all the poor dead animals in the world. Esther did the digging, I wrote the poems, and Esther's little brother, Puttie, cried."
Early readers will love the dry humor and wonderfully rounded story of All the Dear Little Animals. Nilsson perfectly captures the child's perspective, balancing compassion and humor. This is a very funny story about a topic that touches all of us.