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The honeybee  Cover Image Book Book

The honeybee / by Kirsten Hall ; illustrated by Isabelle Arsenault.

Hall, Kirsten, (author.). Arsenault, Isabelle, 1978- (illustrator.).

Summary:

Illustrations and rhyming text follow endangered honeybees through the year as they forage for pollen and nectar, communicate with others at their hive, and make honey.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781481469975
  • Physical Description: 40 unnumbered pages : colour illustrations ; 29 cm
  • Publisher: New York : Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 2018.
Subject: Honeybee > Juvenile fiction.
Genre: Stories in rhyme.

Available copies

  • 10 of 19 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 1 of 2 copies available at Terrace Public Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 19 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Terrace Public Library E HAL (Text) 35151001086321 Easy Books Volume hold Available -
Terrace Public Library E HAL (Text) 35151001163286 Easy Books In process -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2018 February #2
    *Starred Review* In bouncy, lilting verse and vibrant, inviting artwork, this ode to the humble honeybee is dripping with charm: "This is the flower the bee has chosen. / This is the flower the pollen grows in. / This is the flower, its color so bright / its sweet blooming scent calls the bee from its flight." Hall's lively lines skitter around Arsenault's warm, honey-colored illustrations packed with jostling, abstract plants and cheerful bees with cartoonishly huge eyes. The bees buzz around the pages, seeking out flowers, bringing nectar back to the hive, making honey, and locking it up tight in their honeycombs, before nestling together through the long, cold winter. With occasional speech balloons and delightfully expressive gestures, the bees mirror the gleeful tone of the poem, as do the handwritten fonts in varying sizes. Arsenault's scenes are a captivating mixture of smudgy charcoals, soft yellows, and fluorescent oranges, combining crisp shapes with more abstract figures. The entertaining tone and freewheeling art are a pure joy, but there's plenty of science here, too, and a closing note about the importance of bees to our ecosystem brings the point home. Boisterously written, gorgeously illustrated, and sneakily educational. Copyright 2018 Booklist Reviews.
  • Horn Book Guide Reviews : Horn Book Guide Reviews 2018 Fall
    Hall's nimble rhyming verse and Arsenault's warm illustrations provide an up-close visit with a friendly colony of anthropomorphized honeybees. The book hovers between fiction and information; the solid if limited facts are conveyed in an impressionistic style. The text's varied rhythms mimic a bee's movements in a summery world; that atmosphere is captured in the mixed-media illustrations' muted palette of mostly yellow, gray, brown, and beige. Copyright 2018 Horn Book Guide Reviews.
  • Horn Book Magazine Reviews : Horn Book Magazine Reviews 2018 #4
    Hall's nimble rhyming verse and Arsenault's warm illustrations provide an up-close visit with a friendly colony of anthropomorphized honeybees. Smiling bees sip nectar and collect pollen from flowers, then return to the hive (here, a rarely seen wild one) to communicate vital flower-finding information to the next foraging group: "Dance for us, foragers! / Show us the way!" Inside the hive, house bees work to reconstitute the nectar and pack the honeycomb cells with "nectar-plaster," which eventually becomes "liquid gold"--i.e., honey. The book hovers between fiction and information; the solid if limited facts are conveyed in an impressionistic style. There's no discussion of development and care of young, for example, and why bees produce honey is only alluded to ("And only when / it's needed most-- / a hungry day-- / will these vaults / be tapped"). The text's varied rhythms mimic a bee's movements in a summery world; that atmosphere is captured in the mixed-media illustrations' muted palette of mostly yellow, gray, brown, and beige. Bright pops of yellow-gold are used sparingly for pollen, honey, and a few flowers (others are rendered in soft reds and blues). Hall's appended page-long letter to readers (packed with bee wordplay) provides more information about pollination and emphasizes what readers can do to help protect honeybees. kitty Flynn Copyright 2018 Horn Book Magazine Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2018 April #1
    Children will be buzzing to learn more about honeybees after reading this story. Hall takes her readers on a sunny romp through a springtime pasture abuzz with friendly honeybees in this bright and cheerful picture book. Hall's rhyme scheme is inviting and mirrors the staccato sounds of a bee buzzing. At times, however, meaning seems to take a back seat to the rhyme. The bees are suggested to "tap" while flying, a noise that adult readers might have trouble explaining to curious listeners. Later, the "hill" the bees return to may elicit further questions, as this point is not addressed textually or visually. Minor quibbles aside, the vocabulary is on-point as the bees demonstrate the various stages of nectar collection and honey creation. Arsenault's illustrations, a combination of ink, gouache, graphite, and colored pencil, are energetic and cheerful. Extra points should be awarded for properly illustrating a natural honeybee hive (as opposed to the often depicted wasp nest) . The expressive bees are also well-done. Their faces are welcoming, but their sharp noses hint at the stingers that may be lurking behind them. Hall's ending note to readers will be appreciated by adults but will require their interpretation to be accessible to children. A sensible choice for read-alouds and STEAM programs. Readers (and listeners) will think that this book is the bee's knees. (Picture book. 6-8) Copyright Kirkus 2018 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2018 March #4

    The plight of the endangered honeybee is the raison d'être of this story, Hall (The Jacket) explains in a concluding note, though it's a long and twisty flight to reach it. Readers hear the first bee ("It's closer, it's coming, it's buzzing, it's humming...") before they see it arrive and land on a flower in search of nectar. The singsong verse is aflutter with strained rhyming: "There now, it drills now,/ the bee sips and spills now,/ there now, it swills now, it sits oh-so-still now./ There now, it fills now, it's back to the hill now...." After the bee's buzzing summons others to mealtime, they all swarm back to the hive to begin the honey-making process, whose description may need translating by adults: "We suck out the nectar, we suck it straight through./ Chew, chew—we're changing its makeup, we're giving the nectar a chemical shake-up." Dominated by golden hues punctuated with splashes of neon yellow, the airy mixed-media art by Arsenault (Cloth Lullaby) helps kids decipher the goings-on, in and out of the hive. Tips on how to help preserve the bee population follow the story. Ages 4–8. (May)

    Copyright 2018 Publishers Weekly.
  • School Library Journal Reviews : SLJ Reviews 2018 April

    PreS-Gr 2—Hall celebrates honeybees with a lyrical poem. She hears a bee among the flowers, then finds and follows it as it searches for nectar, gathers pollen, and returns to the hive to dance. She watches other foragers leave as house bees make the nectar into honey. The bees huddle quietly with their queen through the long winter, reemerging in the spring. This simplifies the process slightly, but doesn't diminish the wonder. These well-crafted rhyming couplets beg to be read aloud. Set on gloriously illustrated pages and nicely paced, the text appears to be hand printed in varying fonts, becoming part of Arsenault's light and lively illustrations done in ink, gouache, pencil, and colored pencil. The artist uses neon orange to great effect, highlighting the pollen bees find and carry off. (Adult readers may want to point out that bees see the world's color very differently.) After the busyness of summer work, a wordless spread—a snowy landscape where the hive hangs peacefully from a tree—emphasizes the quiet rest of winter. Yellow-and-black striped endpapers and an embossed cover add to the effect. While the narrative and illustrations will appeal to very young listeners, the back matter, which touches on current threats, seems addressed to older children, suggesting ways in which they can help honeybees survive. VERDICT A sweet success; purchase for most shelves.—Kathleen Isaacs, Children's Literature Specialist, Pasadena, MD

    Copyright 2018 School Library Journal.

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