Partly Cloudy
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- 9,99 €
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- 9,99 €
Publisher Description
What do you see when you look at clouds?
Two curious bunnies enjoy watching clouds go by. But when they look at the sky, they each see something completely different! While one bunny likes to use his imagination and sees cotton candy or whipped cream, the other bunny can only see the science behind them. Together they learn that cloud watching is much more fun when they can see it through each other's eyes.
With extensive back matter about the many kinds of clouds and the water cycle, celebrated author and illustrator Deborah Freedman once again combines the educational with the whimsical, while introducing young readers to two irresistible characters who see the power of possibility.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Via two insightful rabbits and a backdrop of freely washed blue sky, Freedman (Tiny Dino) fashions a story of dual perception that both catalogs cloud types and contrasts two ways of seeing the world. One variation, as embodied by a bunny whose head is often turned skyward, involves imaginative perception: "Ooh, that cloud looks like cotton candy." The other, as conveyed by a spectacle-wearing bunny sometimes toting a book, involves acquiring and disseminating information: "That is not cotton candy. I see a CUMULUS cloud." Undeterred by fact, the imaginative bunny continues observing: "Look at this cloud! I see a cozy blanket." The second bunny notes, about the stratus cloud: "A cold and wet blanket, perhaps." As this back and forth continues, small inset boxes define each cloud type, explaining the Latinate terms, each of which Freedman's watercolor paintings depict clearly and recognizably. When the sky's color begins to change, and the rabbits are caught in a thunderstorm despite the bespectacled bunny's warning, the atmospheric event drives a momentary reversal between the two. Creative imagination and scientific intelligence need not be exclusive, suggests this gently educational book that resists simple caricature. An author's note and more about clouds concludes. Ages 4–8.