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Sam Squirrel

Autor Suzanne Selfors Ilustrat de Ramona Kaulitzki
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 14 ian 2025 – vârsta până la 9 ani
The great-granddaughter of Mother Nature teams up with a squirrel to start the spring season in this first book in the charmingly whimsical chapter book series from bestselling and award-winning author Suzanne Selfors.

Willow has agreed to house-sit while her grandmother, Mother Nature, is on vacation. Willow thinks it’s going to be as easy as watering a fern and feeding a cat, but when she arrives, she realizes her grandmother has left a long to-do list of difficult tasks like dusting the wings of a sleeping bat family, repairing the broken windows of a rabbit’s greenhouse, and ending winter.

Ending winter? In her eagerness to take a vacation, Mother Nature forgot to catch the unruly North Wind for its long nap. So, even though it’s the first day of spring, the entire land is covered in ice and snow. If the snow doesn’t melt, allowing the spring grass to grow, the critters of the Quiet Woods will surely go hungry.

With the help of Sam Squirrel and an elk prince named Errol, will Willow be able to catch the unruly North Wind to preserve the natural balance her grandmother entrusted her with?
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781665949026
ISBN-10: 1665949023
Pagini: 96
Dimensiuni: 140 x 213 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.2 kg
Editura: ALADDIN PAPERBACKS

Notă biografică

Suzanne Selfors is a bestselling author who lives on an island in the Pacific Northwest where rain falls like music and slugs frolic beneath ferns. She has a husband who works as a pilot, two grown-up kids, a rescue cat who was found living in a hole in a wall, and a nutty corgi named Fiona.

Ramona Kaulitzki has always spent her days doing something creative, from sewing to photography, but her biggest passion has always been drawing and storytelling. She is the illustrator of many picture books, including Bravo, Little Bird! by Annie Silvestro, The Christmas Owl by Gideon Sterer and Ellen Kalish, and the #1 New York Times bestseller Sisters First by Jenna Bush Hager and Barbara Pierce Bush. Born and raised in a small city in Germany, Ramona enjoys riding horses. Her love for animals, and for nature, is a major inspiration for her work. Her illustrations are created digitally, but she also enjoys drawing and painting with traditional media. Visit her at RamonaKaulitzkiArt.com.

Extras

1 Mother Nature Takes a Walk

 

 

   

 

  Sam Squirrel and his brothers, Simon and Soot, were sitting at the breakfast table waiting for their acorn porridge when a voice called from outside their window. “Hello up there. Toodle-doo!”

  It wasn’t the squeaky voice of Mr. Chipmunk, who lived in the tree next door. And it wasn’t the shrill voice of Lady Robin, who nested three branches above the Squirrel family. This voice was gentle, like a breeze.

  “Who could that be?” Sam asked. He was the youngest of the three squirrel kits, and by far the most curious.

  “Is it a badger?” Simon asked. “I bet I could wrestle a badger.” He was the oldest of the kits, and by far the largest.

  “IS IT A FROG?” Soot asked. Soot was the middle kit, and by far the loudest. “IF I KISS THE FROG, WILL IT TURN INTO A PRINCE?”

  Because they were still very young, Sam and his brothers had spent most of their first winter sleeping in their nest, so they hadn’t met many other critters. But they had been told many bedtime stories. “The visitor is not a badger, so please don’t wrestle her,” Mama Squirrel said with a laugh. “And she’s not a frog, but you can give her a kiss, if you’d like, because she loves all the critters of the Quiet Woods.”

   

  Papa Squirrel, who had been stirring the acorn porridge, took the pot off the stove and wiped his paws on his apron. “Today is the first day of spring, which is a very important day here in the Quiet Woods. And on the first day of spring, someone very special always pays us a visit.”

  Both Papa Squirrel and Mama Squirrel shared a smile. Then Papa Squirrel untied his apron and plopped his cap onto his head. “Scurry outside, boys. There’s someone I want you to meet.”

  Simon and Soot jumped from their chairs and leapt over the table, sending spoons and bowls flying. They hurried across the floor, raced around the sofa, jumped over a stack of books, and then followed their father outside.

  Sam was curious to see who had come to visit, but he was also a bit timid. So he waited for Mama Squirrel to tie a pink bonnet onto her head. Then he followed her outside.

  The Squirrels’ house was built high up in the Big Oak Tree. Spring had indeed arrived. The winter wind had given way to a gentle breeze, and the snow had melted, revealing new grass and yellow daffodils. Dew drops sparkled in the morning sun, which warmed Sam’s furry cheeks. Songbirds twittered, and a chorus of frogs practiced their singing in the nearby pond.

  “Hello up there. Toodle-doo!”

  From his perch on the branch, Sam peered down at the forest floor. Then he gasped.

  The visitor was looking up at him. Her face wasn’t furry—it was covered in wrinkly skin. Her ears weren’t on the top of her head—they were on the sides. Long silver hair hung past her shoulders, and her feet were bare and pink. As far as Sam could tell, she didn’t have a tail.

  And she was ginormous!

  Papa Squirrel bowed, then said, “Boys, I’d like you to meet Mother Nature. She is the caretaker of the Quiet Woods. Mother Nature, I’d like you to meet our new kits, Simon, Soot, and Sam.”

  “Hello,” said Simon.

  “HELLO!” said Soot.

  “Hello,” said Sam.

  “Hello,” Mother Nature replied. “What a lovely family.”

  Sam couldn’t figure out what he was looking at. “What kind of critter is she?” he asked Mama Squirrel.

  “She’s tall enough to be a moose,” Simon said.

  “SHE’S ROUND ENOUGH TO BE A PORCUPINE!” Soot said.

  “She’s not a moose, and she’s not a porcupine,” Mama Squirrel told them. “Mother Nature is a person. She’s the only person in the Quiet Woods.”

  Mother Nature sighed. “Yes, it’s true that I am the only person, which can be a burden because there’s always so much work.” She pulled a piece of paper from her pocket and held it up. “Look at this. It’s my To-Do list for today, and it’s very long.”

  Sam’s whiskers twitched. “What’s a To-Do list?” he asked.

  “It’s a list of all the things someone needs to do. Or wants to do. Or hopes to do,” Mother Nature explained. Then she began to read from the piece of paper. “Replace a broken window in the rabbits’ greenhouse. Find a new pond for the Beaver family. Wake the honey bees so they can pollinate the blackberries. Fix the—” She interrupted herself with a yawn. “Oh dear, I need a nap.”

  “What you need is a vacation,” Mama Squirrel said.

  “A vacation?” Mother Nature laughed. “Mother Nature can’t go on vacation. Who would take care of the Peaceful Prairie or the Sunny Meadow or Percy’s Pond?” She yawned again. “Who would check on the critters of the Quiet Woods, as I do each and every first day of spring? How are you doing, Squirrel family?”

  Papa Squirrel puffed out his chest with pride. “We scurried and gathered plenty of acorns and lots of nesting material, so we’ve been well fed and warm all winter.”

  “That’s good to hear,” Mother Nature said. “The North Wind made much mischief this winter, so I’m happy that you had plenty of acorns.” She tucked her list back into her pocket. “To celebrate the first day of spring, I’ve brought treats.” She held out a basket and opened its lid.

  Simon’s nose began to wiggle. “Food!”

  Simon and Soot scurried down the tree trunk, zigging and zagging until they reached the forest floor, where Mother Nature handed them each a little cake. “Would you like one?” she called up to Sam. “They’re carrot cakes.”

  “Yes, please.” Sam did not zig or zag. Instead, he carefully made his way down the trunk. When he reached the forest floor, Mother Nature handed him a cake. That’s when he noticed the yellow butterflies who were resting in her hair.

  “Thank you,” he said. But he didn’t take a bite of the cake. Instead he looked into Mother Nature’s large brown eyes. “Can anyone make a list?” he asked.

  “Yes,” she replied. “Lists can be made by anyone and can be about anything. Two of my favorite lists are Things I Like to Eat for Breakfast and Places I’d Like to Visit.”

  Sam’s mind began to swirl with all sorts of lists that he might create. But he had another question. “Why did the North Wind make mischief?”

  Mother Nature smiled, and her face got even more wrinkly. “It is the North Wind’s nature to make mischief. Just as it is a squirrel’s nature to scurry and gather.” She leaned closer. “Do you scurry?”

  Sam shook his head. “Not really.”

  “Do you gather?”

   

  Sam shook his head again. “I like to think about things.”

  “I see.” Mother Nature licked a bit of carrot cake frosting from her finger. “Well, Sam Squirrel, who does not scurry or gather, it will be very interesting to watch you grow up. I shall keep an eye on you.” Then she closed the basket and glanced at the sky. “Morning is quickly passing, and I have lots of other critters to visit. Happy spring, Squirrel family. Toodle-doo!”

  “Happy spring!” Mama and Papa Squirrel called, waving from their branch.

  Sam carefully held his carrot cake, watching as the first person he’d ever met, and the only person he would probably ever meet, walked away, butterflies taking flight around her silver head.

 

Descriere

Descriere de la o altă ediție sau format:
The first book in a new chapter book series by the bestselling author of Wedgie and Gizmo, Suzanne Selfors.