From Publishers Weekly
Uncluttered, airy spreads and a relaxed rural setting contribute to the charm of this thoroughly cozy book. As a boy awakens to sunlight pouring through an unshaded window, an unseen narrator compares the morning rays to butter melting on hot pancakes. The analogy gets an added boost when the child wanders downstairs to find his parents cooking the golden breakfast food. Although the text pays special attention to morning rituals, it unhurriedly takes the main character through an entire day; one oft-repeated phrase, "the sun ticks/ the birds talk," suggests that the sun keeps time as it moves across the sky. Readers observe the changing light?spread by spread, Karas creates the yellow dawn, clear midday light, dusky late afternoon and deep-orange sunset. By nighttime, the "puddle of sun" once on the floor has been replaced by cool gray moonlight, and "the moon spills milk/ for the cat to drink." London and Karas, who previously collaborated on Into This Night We Are Rising, deftly combine free verse and warm-toned illustrations; reading their calm and comforting volume is satisfaction in itself, a good way to celebrate the morning or conclude a busy day. Ages 2-6.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From School Library Journal
PreSchool-Grade 1?A mood piece about the cycle of the day. Although the setting is a farm, there is a nice blend of imaginatively poetic and concrete images that will speak to children everywhere. London begins bright and early when "spoons sleep nestled in the kitchen drawers"; accelerates during the sights, sounds, and smells of breakfast; jumps through the day where "you leap and tumble in the hay"; and slides into night as "Mama sings in your dark blue room." The illustrations are done primarily in pencil with watercolor washes in a free, slightly cartoonlike style that aptly enhances the evocative text. The use of colored and sometimes textured paper underscores the changing light as the day circles from "beyond the rim of morning" to "beyond the rim of evening." Like butter on pancakes, this warm and luscious book is bound to be a crowd pleaser.?Karen James, Louisville Free Public Library, KY
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.