



The Longest Storm
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
A New York Times 2021 Best Children's Book
This heartwarming family story from acclaimed author-illustrator Dan Yaccarino features a father and his kids who are stuck inside the house together — and figure out how to connect and overcome conflict.
No one knew where the strange storm came from, or why it lasted so long. The family at the center of this timely story has to hunker down together, with no going outside - and that's hard when there's absolutely nothing to do, and everyone's getting on everyone else's nerves.
This classic in the making will lift hearts with its optimistic vision of a family figuring out how to love and support one another, even when it seems impossible.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
It was unlike any storm we'd ever seen," this layered volume's unspecified narrator says of the title's weather event: "No one knew how long it would last. We were going to have to stay inside, maybe for a long while." A father, a blue dog, and three taupe-skinned siblings—one an adolescent, the other two closer to the target audience age—hunker down: "There was nothing to do, and too much time to do it." As the dark storm rages outside, appearing through the home's windows in almost every scene, domestic life unravels under the pressure of unrelenting proximity. Fights erupt over messy rooms and digital devices, faces turn orange with rage, and communication ceases. But when a bolt of lightning knocks out the power—in a series of striking images that go from blazing yellow to deep blue and turquoise—the individuals huddle together and apologize. Though the storm persists, "something had changed," and the family enjoys each other's company, engages in only minor squabbles, and even puts on an impromptu concert. And when the sun finally does return, they go outside—together—and resolutely begin cleanup out of doors. In bright, flat colors and decisive lines, Yaccarino (Smashy Town) crafts an emotionally nuanced, authentic picture book that simultaneously hints at and avoids mention of recent events. Conveying instantly recognizable sadness and stresses, it clearly shows how connection and resilience can prevail in the face of any storm. Ages 4–8.