Synopses & Reviews
Chopping wood in the fall, hauling sap buckets in the spring, and weeding, howing, and weeding again in the summer: That is life on a farm in the north. It is also seven months of snow; sloppy, impossible mud season; and hot days of haying. Who would miss growing up in such a place?
A love of life and a love of place shines through in Natalie Kinsey-Warnockand#8217;s richly imagined prose. Illustrated with Mary Azarianand#8217;s beautiful woodcuts, this book reveals how chores lead straight to the best kind of fun: night-swimming in the pond, skiing off the barn roof, and finding new gray kittens in the haymow with their eyes still closed. And at storyand#8217;s end, readers from cities, towns, and the country will ask themselves, What would we miss most about our home?
Review
'Farm work, hard work. But there is also lots of fun in this rememberance of growing up 40 years ago on a Vermont Farm.'
Review
'"…the story will surely strike a familiar chord in many families, and it should be eye-opening to readers for whom life on a farm is quite different from their own experiences."'
Review
Farm work, hard work. But there is also lots of fun in this rememberance of growing up 40 years ago on a Vermont Farm.
Booklist, ALA, Starred Review
and#147;and#133;the story will surely strike a familiar chord in many families, and it should be eye-opening to readers for whom life on a farm is quite different from their own experiences.and#8221; School Library Journal
Synopsis
A love of life and a love of place shine through in Natalie Kinsey- Warnockand#8217;s richly imagined prose. Illustrated with Mary Azarianand#8217;s beautiful woodcuts, From Dawn till Dusk reveals how chores lead straight to the best kind of fun: night-swimming in the pond, skiing off the barn roof, and finding new gray kittens in the haymow, with their eyes still closed.
About the Author
'Caldecott Medalist Mary Azarian is a consummate gardener and a skilled and original woodblock artist. Many of her prints are heavily influenced by her love of gardening, and her turn-of-the-century farmhouse is surrounded by gardens that reveal an artist\'s vision. Mary Azarian received the 1999 Caldecott Medal for SNOWFLAKE BENTLEY, written by Jacqueline Briggs Martin. She lives, skis, and gardens in Vermont.Natalie Kinsey-Warnock considers her childhood one of the best imaginable. She and her husband live on the ancestral grounds of her Scottish forebears, who helped settle much of Vermont\'s Northeast Kingdom. She is the author of many fine children\'s books.'