PreS-K—A small child is watching and waiting for something. The second-person narrative tells the youngster that the day is special. Snow starts falling, and soon the child bundles up and goes outside. "You'll be cold, cold, cold, with a radish-red nose." Even at this point, readers don't know who is speaking. As the day progresses the child builds a snowman, and readers realize that the snowman has been narrating. When the youngster places a bent twig on his face, he says, "today is the special day…when you make me…smile." Smiling child and snowman pose for Dad's photo. After a two-page romp through the seasons, the story ends with the promise, "A year may pass, but if you wait…we can share a snowy smile again." The closing image is the one the child's father snapped with his camera. The illustrations look like pencil and gouache drawings. They're soft around the edges and just right for a snowy story. It's a simple story, just a child, Dad, and a snowman. The mood it creates is perfect for the season.—
Ieva Bates, Ann Arbor District Library, MI
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