Vancouver Sun

SEASONAL GREETINGS

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Spring has sprung, but at this writing, the trees on Bernie Goedhart's street remain bare, and nary a blade of grass has riz (to misquote a popular rhyme). Still, winter is technicall­y over and we can look forward to planting gardens and spending time outdoors without bulky coats and mittens. Below are some picture books to help you get in the mood.

A Garden Called Home

Jessica J. Lee Illustrate­d by Elaine Chen Tundra Books

Canadian-born author Jessica J. Lee draws on personal experience­s in this story about a young girl whose immigrant mother doesn't like winter and spends the season “wrapped up in big quilted jackets” and “never wants to go outside.” But one winter Mama tells her daughter they're going on a trip to her homeland, to visit her sister, and our little narrator learns why her mother is so averse to the cold. Lee doesn't name Mama's homeland in the text, but her own mother was born in Taiwan and she clearly draws on family history in telling this story. At her brother's farm, Mama shows her daughter the vegetables she used to eat as a child and our narrator repeats their names in Mandarin.

Back home, Mama reverts to her warm quilted jackets, holing up indoors, but her daughter — having seen how animated her mother was during their trip — decides to learn about the outdoors in winter, and talks her mother into coming on a nature walk through the snow. Mama is won over, and in the spring the two plant seeds and grow a garden “that feels like home.” For ages 3 to 7.

Bompa's Insect Expedition

David Suzuki with Tanya Lloyd Kyi Illustrate­d by Qin Leng Greystone Kids

OK, the title focuses on insects rather than gardens, but this book tells the story of a grandfathe­r who takes two of his grandchild­ren on a nature expedition right in their own backyard, searching for insects among the trees, grasses and flowers — and learning how those insects help pollinate plants and how they feed birds, bats and frogs. The text is lively and informativ­e, which is not surprising given the author's knowledge as a scientist and environmen­talist and his ability at imparting that knowledge for many years as author and broadcaste­r. But this book also owes much of its appeal to the colourful, detailed art of Toronto's Qin Leng, who makes Bompa instantly recognizab­le and does a great job of depicting the liveliness of his two grandchild­ren. For ages 4 to 8.

All That Grows

Written and illustrate­d by Jack Wong Groundwood Books

The narrator in this book is a young boy whose sister takes him on nature walks in their neighbourh­ood and shares informatio­n about flowers, trees and weeds. The boy, amazed at his sister's knowledge, helps her weed her garden and when she gives up on a particular­ly persistent patch, he keeps watering it to see what will grow.

The more knowledge his sister imparts, the more questions the boy has — but when delicate white flowers eventually open from little buds in the weedy patch, she is at a loss to name them. “Maybe we can look them up in one of my books,” she says, unwittingl­y providing an answer to one of his questions (“How does my sister know?”).

Beautifull­y illustrate­d by the author in pastels, one particular­ly stunning page looks entirely black at first sight but on closer examinatio­n shows the young narrator in bed, covers pulled up to his chin, still pondering the questions swirling around in his head. For ages 3 to 7.

Walking Trees

Written and illustrate­d by Marie-louise Gay Groundwood Books

Montreal-based author and illustrato­r Marie-louise Gay, inspired by a news story about a project in Leeuwarden, a city in northern Netherland­s, tells us about Lily who loves trees and asked for one of her own as a birthday gift.

“I'll put it on the balcony and water it every day,” she promises her father, who lives with her in a tiny apartment on the fifth floor of a building on a busy street. She wakes on her birthday to the sight of a potted tree on the balcony, and decides to name it

George. But Lily soon decides she wants George to see that the world is wider than just the balcony, so she lifts the tree onto her wagon and takes it down to street level, where she introduces George to the colourful sights and scenarios in her neighbourh­ood. In no time, other kids acquire trees of their own and wheel them around, sharing the shade they provide on hot, sunny days and the smiles they evoke on the part of older neighbours.

Gay's distinctiv­e, detailed art culminates in a four-page foldout spread that illustrate­s how the walking trees help bring a community together to enjoy the outdoors. For ages 3 and older.

Kaiah's Garden

Melanie Florence

Illustrate­d by Karlene Harvey North Winds Press/scholastic Canada

A story with a focus on Indigenous beadwork, this picture book tells a universal tale about the difficulti­es of moving to a new home in a new town and adjusting to the inevitable changes. Kaiah misses her grandmothe­r terribly now that she and her brother and mother have moved away.

But thinking of Grandma's garden reminds her of the treasure box filled with colourful mementoes she made after Grandma taught her how to bead — things like a bright red beaded apple, a buttery yellow sun, pink rose and the shiny green turtle that reminds her of Grandma's garden. It prompts her to start beading a garden of her own, for her new home. For ages 3 to 7.

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 ?? TUNDRA BOOKS ?? Now that Mama has learned to deal with winter, she and her daughter are planting a garden in the spring — and befriendin­g their neighbours in the process. These graphics are from the pages of A Garden Called Home by Jessica J. Lee and illustrate­d by Elaine Chen.
TUNDRA BOOKS Now that Mama has learned to deal with winter, she and her daughter are planting a garden in the spring — and befriendin­g their neighbours in the process. These graphics are from the pages of A Garden Called Home by Jessica J. Lee and illustrate­d by Elaine Chen.
 ?? GROUNDWOOD BOOKS ?? The first neighbour Lily encounters outside in the book Walking Trees is Mrs. Lee.
GROUNDWOOD BOOKS The first neighbour Lily encounters outside in the book Walking Trees is Mrs. Lee.

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