Book Descriptions
for The Bear in the Book by Kate Banks and Georg Hallensleben
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
When a little boy’s mother sits down to read to him, he chooses his favorite book. “The book was about a big black bear who went to sleep for the winter. 'Do bears really sleep all winter long?’ asked the boy. 'Yes,’ his mother said. 'They hibernate.’ The boy turned the page.” Kate Banks’s meta story about the experience of reading a picture book is a thoughtful, intriguing offering full of quiet drama. “Snowflakes began to fall across the pages of the book. The snow sat snugly in the boughs of the trees. The boy could almost feel it. 'Snow is cold,’ he said.” Banks’s beautifully composed narrative, with its vivid language and wonderful pacing, captures the comforting, enriching experience of sharing a story. Georg Hallensleben’s warm, deeply hued illustrations depict the story of the boy and the story of the bear, and how the two can become seamless in the mind of a child. (Ages 3–6)
CCBC Choices 2013. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2013. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
It's time for bed, and a little boy chooses his favorite book for his mother to read to him. The bear in the book is preparing for his own deep slumber, hibernating through the winter while humans and other animals explore the snowy landscape around him. Just when the bear wakes up to greet the spring, the boy drifts off to sleep. Kate Banks' soft and rhythmic text is brought to life by Georg Hallensleben's strong, expressive paintings in this bedtime read that will carry young readers through the seasons.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.