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L'Ourse Des Neiges (2010)

by Jackie Morris(Favorite Author)
4.32 of 5 Votes: 4
ISBN
2013933819 (ISBN13: 9782013933810)
languge
English
publisher
Gautier Languereau
review 1: Poetic and mystical, this picture book is a rich read. In the beginning of time, people and animals were as one. Two tiny polar bear cubs were born into the world and cared for by their mother bear in an ice cave. But the mother was tricked, and Raven was able to steal one of the cubs away. A hunter found Raven with a bundle of white fur. Raven flew off, and the hunter picked up the bundle of fur and headed back home on his sled. When he brought the furs into his home, he and his wife discovered a baby inside. The two had wished for a child and here was one. They raised him as their own. When the child was seven years old, Raven returned and drew him out onto the ice and away from home. There he almost froze to death, until the bears found him and took him away w... moreith them. He is a boy of two families, two worlds, who must make a choice.Morris proves here that she is just as radiant a writer as an illustrator. Her story is told in words that make you slow down, savor them. If you read them aloud, it reads as verse, a poem in paragraph form. The world she creates is one of wonder and timelessness. It is a world at birth, a world that mirrors our own, but is also filled with magic and connections. She has created a picture book that is an invitation to dream.Her illustrations have a lot to do with this too. They capture the Arctic landscape in all of its blues, whites, and purples. Then they also show the human family filled with the warmth of fire, furs and the snugness of their home. But most powerful of all is the bear home, where it is still cold, but the heat and warmth comes from the animals themselves, shown powerful in creams and yellows and equally loving. A gorgeous story that is both beautifully written and illustrated, this book is radiant. Appropriate for ages 5-8.
review 2: An enchanting, magical book set in the beginning of time, before the naming and fixing of things, when men and animals were all equal. A polar bear cub is stolen away from his mother by a raven and raised by hunters as their child, till the day when he wanders far from home and is found by his bear-twin. Then he finds he must choose between his two families....As always, Jackie Morris's paintings are the most gorgeous things imaginable for a children's book - though to call this merely a children's picture book is doing it a great dis-service. This isn't a 'picture book' in the sense of a cartoon type film tie-in but one of exquisite paintings, whether of wide open Arctic spaces or intimacy of hunter's tent. She manages to convey both the power and strength of the massive bears and their tenderness and love.With wonderfully descriptive, poetic prose, it's suitable as either a bedtime storybook for a young child or read-alone for an older one, or play 'spot the arctic fox' as he hides in the background of many pictures. A book to spark a child's imagination and one they will treasure for always - or give in and treat yourself! less
Reviews (see all)
Tomm402
Beautiful illustrations and a fairy tale feel for this story about polar bears and the first people.
bmalvs
Gorgeous watercolor illustration for this arctic folktale that's similar to the Persephone myth.
p121nc355
Jackie Morris' illustrations add to a beautiful story about love - beautiful illustrations!
suprheat
Five stars for the lovely, evocative illustrations. I couldn't stop counting the bears.
Colleen
Magical book! A must for elementary libraries!
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