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Summary
Summary
AN IMPOSSIBLY CUDDLY BABY POLAR BEAR
travels from one magical place to another. "Hush baby polar bear. Sleep in the snow, and dream of the places where sleeping bears go." Readers follow a baby snow-white plush polar bear that has been brought to life by his owner's imagination from the back of a whale with the sea spray surrounding, to a land of tall grass where butterflies fl oat by up into the sky itself...and happily right back through the window into the loving arms of his owner asleep in bed. Mack's lush and lovable illustrations suit the lulling, rhyming text to make a perfect bedtime book sure to leave readers and listeners with warm and fuzzy feelings read after read.
Author Notes
JEFF MACK has illustrated a number of picture books, including HURRY! HURRY! and RUB-A-DUB SUB and five of James Howe's popular Bunnicula books. Hush Little Polar Bear is the first picture book that he has both written and illustrated. He lives in Easthampton, Massachusetts.
Reviews (4)
School Library Journal Review
PreS-Following the rhythm and rhyme of "Hush Little Baby," a young girl sings a lullaby to her toy bear: "Hush little polar bear./Sleep in the snow,/and dream of the places/where sleeping bears go." As the two of them drift off to sleep, they dream of sailing the high seas, chasing butterflies, bouncing through cow pastures, creeping through a cave, swinging from a vine, and so on until, soaring through the sky, they return home to cuddle in bed. The richly textured spreads are bright and imaginative, perfectly complementing the simple, lyrical text. Begging to be sung, this will be a natural choice for bedtime or teddy-bear-themed storyhours.-Rachel Kamin, North Suburban Synagogue Beth El, Highland Park, IL (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
In his first solo outing, Mack (illustrator of the Bunnicula series) sends an eager-looking polar bear on a series of dreamtime adventures: "Swim through a waterfall./ Splash in a stream./ Paddle past rainbows/ that glisten and gleam." Big, rounded shapes and pastel-tinted spreads encourage calm, while rhythmic verses describe action. The polar bear looks like a real cub; the ending reveals him (her) as a stuffed animal snuggled in the arms of the girl who, presumably, is the narrator. She's right behind the polar bear in every spread, watching over him; in Mack's cheerful, fuzzy acrylic paintings, they travel across the ocean, through a rain forest, a desert, and up into the sky before ending safely in bed. "Then look right beside you,/ and that's where I'll be," she promises the bear. Giving the child character the speaking rather than the listening part neatly reverses lullaby convention. Ages 2-6. (Nov.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Kirkus Review
A sweet metaliterary journey takes a girl and her stuffed polar bear on a fanciful trip through a variety of terrains before they return to her bedroom. The adventure begins on the title page, where readers see the wide-eyed little girl sitting in bed, holding the very book they are reading. The child addresses her bear directly in verse, each page turn revealing a bright, new, softly rounded landscape: "Swing through the trees from a dangling vine. / Forge through a desert where stars shimmer and shine." Careful readers will spot the little girl following the fuzzy white bear along, watching from behind trees and hills as the broadly smiling bear enjoys each moment. Mack's genial, soft-edged bear is the star attraction in this lulling tale; the verse abets each page turn but definitely takes second billing to the images. Children will find it a literal breath of fresh air as the peripatetic bear crawls in the window to curl up on the now-slumbering girl's pillow. In a world full of bedtime books, this one has a place. (Picture book. 2-5) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
The title page establishes the fantasy, as a girl lies in bed reading her picture-book Hush Little Polar Bear. With the girl observing nearby, the little white bear flies, rides, bounces, crawls, swims, and swings through a variety of landscapes cave, cow pasture, and mountaintop morphing at last into a stuffed bear on the girl's pillow. The pedestrian rhymed verse serves merely as a vehicle for the vibrant, cheerful art. After the bear's playful excursions, images of puffy white clouds, fuzzy bear fur, and downy warm blankets bring the gentle bedtime fantasy to a dozy close. Pair with Robie H. Harris' equally imaginative bedtime story, Maybe a Bear Ate It! (2008) before turning out the lights.--Perkins, Linda Copyright 2008 Booklist