At the beginning of winter, Little Snow’s mother fills his big, sky-blue bed with feathers and reminds him that it is “for sleeping, not jumping.”
Of course, Little Snow cannot resist, and whenever Mommy isn’t around, he jumps and jumps. Each time, some feathers fall from his cloud-shaped bed. At one point, he jumps extra high and the bed tears, releasing a sky full of feathers that falls in a blizzard of snow upon a city’s rooftops. In what is clearly a companion to Lin’s Caldecott Honor book A Big Mooncake for Little Star (2018), this book’s color palette consists of a solid white negative space instead of black, and light-blue snowflakes adorn Little Snow’s white pajamas. As before, a mischievous little protagonist with Asian features is the cause of a natural phenomenon that readers will recognize with satisfaction. The story is clever but simple, without the extra layers of cultural and natural complexity that made Lin’s previous book so exceptional. Lin’s gouache illustrations are an echo of that book as well, with Little Snow’s pajama edges similarly bleeding into the background. It’s still visually intriguing, but this time around, everything feels more stark than luminous. The most delightful spread is the most colorful one, as the snow falls over city buildings full of diverse children peering out the windows, enchanted.
A sweet and clever modern myth that may send readers back to its lauded companion.
(Picture book. 4-8)