PRO CONNECT
Tammy Cranston has a certification in bereavement and served as a hospice bereavement volunteer for five years, offering support and services to patients and families. She’s devoted to helping others through some of life’s most difficult challenges. She's an award-winning author of "Rooted," a five-book children's series focusing on growth and perseverance. She has written two memoirs, “Why Not Me?” published by Teach Services, Inc., and recently coauthored “The Blank Journal” with her husband, Bob Cranston. She has a bachelor’s degree in communication from the University of Phoenix. She is passionate about her faith and family. She loves to plan, implement, and preserve memories through photography, videography, and the written word. Together, she and Bob, parent four children and their spouses, and grandparent twelve grandchildren living in four different states. After years in Illinois, they now reside in Pensacola Beach, Florida.
“Clear, age-appropriate, character-building themes about caring, loss, and change.”
– Kirkus Reviews
A seedling learns life lessons as it grows into a tree in Cranston’s children’s book.
In this simple but thoughtful story, a seedling dreams of becoming a big oak tree—if only he can grow enough to pass the “Seed to Tree” ceremony that makes it official. His mentor Grandpa Oakey, offering wisdom and encouragement, reassures the seedling when he faces challenges. During a dramatic storm, when “Lightning flashes and the sky screams, ‘BOOM, BOOM, BOOM,’” Grandpa Oakey yells, “‘Stay rooted, little one,’” as the seedling fights to survive. This phrase will become especially meaningful when the seedling realizes it is his turn to take on the role of mentor. Wilting during a hot summer in the forest, the seedling wonders how he can “become a tree with a broken limb and droopy leaves”; Grandpa Oakley’s kind owl friends fly in buckets of water to help. With a dash of whimsy, Cranston teaches young readers about developing inner strength, respect, and empathy for others, and loss is presented as part of the natural cycle of life. Alternating with pages of text set against a light blue background, full-page, colorful digital illustrations offer playful and dramatic visual touches, including the trees’ expressive faces; whirls of heavy wind and jagged lightning bolts; and a possum, squirrels, and an earthworm helping the seedling in his “Seed to Tree” ceremony. (The book’s limited real-life plant lore includes the seedling’s eventual name, “Dendro,” which is inspired by Grandpa Oakey’s explanation of “dendrochronology,” the process of determining a tree’s age by counting its rings after it dies.) The text includes a “Discussion Questions” section that young readers can ponder or adults can use as conversation starters to engage children in expressing how they relate to aspects of Dendro’s experiences: “Dendro looked up to Grandpa Oakey. Who do you look up to, and why?”
Clear, age-appropriate, character-building themes about caring, loss, and change.
Pub Date: Sept. 9, 2024
ISBN: 9798991499323
Page count: 32pp
Review Posted Online: March 5, 2025
Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2025
© Copyright 2025 Kirkus Media LLC. All Rights Reserved.
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