![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The textures Smith (Return to Augie Hobble) builds up seem organically formed, as if waves and time had worn them down, yet the spreads are vivid and clean. One of the book's delights is its shifting moods and colors, which feel like the movements of an orchestral work. He crawls along with a caterpillar, then hangs upside down next to it until the inevitable happens: "There was a flight of butterflies." All of these goodbyes have a wistful sameness, so readers will rejoice when at last the child finds his own tribe of kids a rainbow of leaf-clad children. He dances with penguins until they swim away. Dressed in leaves, he kneels among baby mountain goats ("There was a tribe of kids") until their mother leads them out of reach. Though Smith's story is mostly built around terms for groups of animals "a crash of rhinos," "an unkindness of ravens" it stars a solitary human child, a cross between Peter Pan and Mowgli. ![]()
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