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THE SUN IS LATE AND SO IS THE FARMER by Philip C. Stead Kirkus Star

THE SUN IS LATE AND SO IS THE FARMER

by Philip C. Stead ; illustrated by Erin E. Stead

Pub Date: Nov. 29th, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-8234-4428-1
Publisher: Neal Porter/Holiday House

Animal friends pull together in another collaboration from the Steads.

A disruption in routine prompts a worried group of animals to work together, just as the zoo animals rallied together when Amos McGee fell ill in the Steads’ first joint picture book, A Sick Day for Amos McGee (2010). As in that Caldecott-winning title, Philip Stead’s artful text employs repetition and just-right word choices to result in a pleasing aurality. A mule, a milk cow, and a miniature horse wonder why the farmer hasn’t arisen yet and then decide to venture forth to awaken her. Leaving the barn is daunting; as Milk Cow says, “We will have to find courage.” Erin Stead’s illustration style closely resembles that which she employed in Sick Day, though the palette here is attuned to the darkness of pre-dawn hours, ultimately giving way to the warmth of the sunrise. Before that happy ending, a whimsical reference to a “sleeping giant” is accompanied by a picture of enormous stocking feet, toes pointing to the sky, which offers a visual echo of Amos’ feet poking out of his bedclothes as he sleeps. And yet, this is a farm setting, not a zoo, and the light-skinned farmer is a woman, not a man. The plot is also slightly more complex, with dream references that may prompt discussion about what happens in the reality of the story world and what is all a dream. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Waste no time in adding this gem to the storytime shelf.

(Picture book. 2-7)