Tadpoles
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
One rainy morning, a father and son bond over a walk through a field full of freshly formed ponds teeming with tadpoles.
In this tender reflection on the fleeting rhythms of the natural world and the enduring love of family, a boy and his father spend a morning exploring an ephemeral pond, a delicate nursery formed by rainfall, perfect for sheltering tadpoles from predators as they grow. The boy’s father doesn’t live with him anymore, and the ponds may only be temporary, but together they make memories that just might last a lifetime.
With Tadpoles, Boston Globe-Horn Book Award winning author and illustrator Matt James draws from his own memories as a parent and as a child to tell a wistful story that will be instantly recognizable to any families sharing memories of exploring together. For an extra treat, additional material at the back of the book enthusiastically outlines the habitats and life cycles that make up these special amphibian spaces.
A Junior Library Guild Gold Standard Selection
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This thoughtful stream-of-consciousness outing from James (The Funeral) is voiced by a child who hunts for tadpoles with their father one rainy spring. In the field across from the child's school, there's an old silo. "Once," the narrator remembers, "when my dad first moved to his new place, I stood in the silo and yelled every single swear word that I know." After sound is shown emanating from the building, the father appears, then kneels and embraces the child. "I guess I was worried that he wouldn't love me anymore, but my dad says that some things never change." Now the two, portrayed with pale skin, wade through the pond that's formed in the field, looking among the tadpoles for froglets ("My dad says that puddles like these are called ephemeral ponds"). Wordless spreads show the protagonist saying farewell to Dad with a small, brave smile, suggesting that the duo's ebb and flow has grown easier. Multimedia art's spattered, stroked textures convey the feel of pages left out in a storm in James's portrait of transition, throughout which the setting and its fluctuating features prove quiet symbols of seasonal and personal transformation, as well as change as a sure thing. Ages 4–8.