The Hare Who Wouldn't Share
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- USD 10.99
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- USD 10.99
Descripción editorial
From internationally acclaimed picture book creator Steve Small comes an “entertaining…delightful” (Booklist, starred review) story of unexpected friendship and the happiness that sharing can bring.
Hare is proud of his turnip patch and doesn’t want to share it with anyone. When the rabbits move in nearby, they invite Hare for carrot soup but he’s much happier being alone. Still, when a huge boar comes to the woods in search of his next meal, Hare feels he should warn his neighbors. Can they find a way to help each other stay out of danger?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In one word—"crotchety"—Small (Brave Little Bear) aptly describes the big, orange, scowling Hare who stars in this visually sumptuous fable. When a rabbit family moves into the woods, all the other animals help fill their cupboard except Hare, who won't part with a single one of his beloved turnips. The rabbits later invite him to a neighborly party, and Hare wonders, "Why would these rabbits give away so much of something they had worked so hard for when they had so little?" Then the protagonist encounters Boar heading to eat the rabbits' carrot crops, and the way the porcine creature looms over Hare and steals his turnips seems to rout the crotchetiness: Hare feels small, vulnerable, and immediately empathic to the rabbits' pending plight. Hare helps the family hide their carrots, and in yet another striking image, huddles with them in the darkness of their burrow and cautions "Shhh..." as Boar's snout protrudes through the entry. Hare's selflessness costs him his entire turnip crop, but his compensation is considerable: he is embraced, for the first time, by the entire forest community—and learns to embrace others in return. Ages 4–8.