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A STONE SAT STILL by Brendan Wenzel

A STONE SAT STILL

by Brendan Wenzel ; illustrated by Brendan Wenzel

Pub Date: Aug. 27th, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-4521-7318-4
Publisher: Chronicle Books

As with Wenzel’s Caldecott Honor–winning They All Saw a Cat (2016), this picture book plays with perspective to examine characteristics of one object—a stone—as it is experienced by a multitude of creatures.

When a sea gull perches atop the stone to crack open a clam, it is “loud.” When a snake curls upon it to rest in the sun, it is “quiet.” But no matter what, the stone “was as it was / where it was in the world.” Wenzel’s mixed-media illustrations use a muted color palette well suited to this presentation of the natural world. Readers experience the stone’s sensory qualities through the text and its relationship with slightly anthropomorphized animals. In the dark, the stone is “a feel,” as curious-looking raccoons know it through their paws, while it’s “a smell,” lit up in vibrant colors, to a hunting coyote, who sniffs the scents of the creatures who have previously passed. The book’s only misstep is the addition of three unnecessary spreads at the end that directly ask readers if they’ve “ever known such a place?” Coming as they do after text that reads, “and the stone was always,” these spreads cannot help but feel anticlimactic.

A gentle celebration of sameness and change.

(Picture book. 4-8)