Book Descriptions
for The Longest Night by Marion Dane Bauer and Ted Lewin
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
“The snow lies deep. The night is long and long. The stars are ice, the moon is frost, and all the world is still.” A trio of animals vow to bring back the sun: Crow will wake the sun with its beak, moose will scoop the sun up with its antlers, and fox will sniff out the sun’s hiding place with its nose and use its teeth to toss it into the sky. To each the wind sighs, “Not you. Not you.” It’s the small and insignificant chickadee that wakes the sun with its song, causing “fingers of light [to] peel back the blanket of darkness. Fingers of light grasp the edge of the world, and slowly, slowly, the sun lifts himself into the sky.” Watercolor illustrations using only three shades (two blues and one brown) adroitly capture the essence of the nighttime world of snow and dark. It is only with the sun’s reappearance in the final pages that additional colors are added to the palette, as the light of day infuses the animals’ world. (Ages 3–8)
CCBC Choices 2010. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2010. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
It is the longest night of the year, and the snow lies deep. All through the forest, animals long for dawn's warmth. Strong and clever creatures boast that only they can bring back the sun. But the wind knows better. The wind calls Chickadee, whose simple song wakes the sun. In this lyrical story from Marion Dane Bauer with breathtaking watercolors by Ted Lewin, it will take a tiny and gentle creature to summon a new day.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.