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A FOX FOUND A BOX by Ged Adamson

A FOX FOUND A BOX

by Ged Adamson ; illustrated by Ged Adamson

Pub Date: Oct. 29th, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-9848-3053-1
Publisher: Schwartz & Wade/Random

When Fox finds a radio while digging for food in the snow, he and his forest companions become transfixed by the music it produces, finding that it has the power to affect their feelings.

When the box stops making noise, the animals try to revive it. “But nothing would make the box sing again.” This newly recaptured quietude permits Fox to hear the “drip! drop! drip! drop!” of water droplets making a puddle. “Fox’s whole body moved to the drip-drop beat.” The other animals hear forest sounds, too: the whooshing wind, chattering geese, the “crunch-crunch of snow…[a]nd the gurgle-gurgle of the river.” Their senses quicken to all that their wintry habitat affords. “And every night, the animals would…let the forest sing them to sleep.” (Sharp-eyed kids will note that Owl is awake.) Adamson’s onomatopoeic text pays fond tribute to music’s power to evoke and shape emotions. His narrative presents children with lovely examples of nature’s own ability to sing to us, if we open our senses. Washy watercolors, accented with colored pencil against plenty of white space, charmingly portray the creatures’ expressions of wonderment, anxiety, and contentment.

This introduction to the sensory pleasures of music and nature makes a fine winter’s tale for storytime or bedtime.

(Picture book. 3-7)