A symbiotically bonded rabbit and a willow tree weather a tornado.
Heeding an unseen voice, Bunny seeks “a safe place to grow.” He finds it with Willow, whose mass, strength, and pendant, leafy branches offer a protective refuge from the open wood. Through the seasons, Bunny grazes clover, grooms himself under Willow’s generous canopy, and shelters in a den beneath her. One evening, a powerful storm brings “an angry spiral” to the woodland…and frightened animals to Willow’s sheltering expanse. Willow keeps them safe all night, but morning reveals the damage Willow has suffered. As she views her reflected injuries in the creek, “at last, Willow wept.” Casting Bunny and other animals in gardening roles, Schulte renders them untangling Willow’s branches and carrying “her cuttings into the wood to plant.” Eventually, after “many moons, many rains… // and many warm, sunny days,” new trees begin to grow. While other animals often visit Willow, Bunny remains with his old friend: “Every day was theirs to share.” Caldecott honoree Denise’s digital illustrations confer a visual disequilibrium, combining blurred landscapes and naturalistic, highly rendered animals. The storm’s eerie light is compelling, but a preponderance of suffused, golden backlight, combined with Schulte’s personified dialogue, lends a Disney-fied vibe to the story.
On the overly sweet side but will appeal widely.
(Picture book. 4-8)