Cooperation, regeneration, and reunification conveyed wordlessly in nine acts.
After a prologue chronicles Tree’s germination and growth through four seasons, Act 1 introduces high drama. A hungry wolf threatens Bunny and eight multihued companions. Separated from the group, Bunny flees, pursued by the wolf. Tree shape-shifts, matching the wolf’s menacing visage and scaring it off. Bunny is grateful, but pictograms in thought bubbles pinpoint the new issue: finding Bunny’s missing mates. When Tree indicates that it’s rooted to the ground, resourceful Bunny reappears with a wheeled cart, transplanting Tree into a pot for a classic quest. Responding to Bunny’s pictograph cues, Tree morphs into a locomotive engine, sailboat, and airplane as the pair search. (Zsako’s depictions of skies and weather are particularly mesmerizing.) Weeping atop a hill, Bunny encounters a bird who’s spotted the bunnies near a twin-peaked mountain. Soon after Tree-as-airplane’s landing, Bunny joyfully reunites with the colony. Though Tree manifests “eyes”—round voids in its foliage—Zsako avoids anthropomorphism, communicating emotions through body language, not physiognomy. The final acts in this handsomely bound, rich volume revel in the symbiosis among the rabbits, their poop, and Tree’s newly replanted roots as its leaves nourish the hungry colony and they later spend winter burrowed beneath it. Wry visuals, like Tree’s clear need for replanting, as well as color associations between rabbits, seeds, and newly emerging trees will intrigue both kids and grown-ups.
A lush tale that’s worthy of repeat perusals.
(Picture book. 4-8)