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Fox's garden  Cover Image Book Book

Fox's garden / Princesse Camcam ; translation, Enchanted Lion Books.

Princesse Camcam, 1982- (illustrator.).

Summary:

"One snowy night, a fox loses its way, entering a village. Chased away by the grown ups, Fox takes shelter in a greenhouse. A little boy sees this from his window. Without hesitating, he brings a basket of food to the greenhouse, where he leaves it for the fox. His gift is noticed and the night becomes a garden of new life, nourished by compassion and kindness. Princesse Camcam's cut-paper illustrations, along with the beautiful lighting of the sets she creates, make the experience of looking at these illustrations both touching and transcendent. Their beauty and essential simplicity reflect the beauty of the story. The reader is left charmed by the fox and the child and thoughtful about the emotional lives of both humans and other creatures."-- Provided by publisher.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781592701674 (hardcover)
  • Physical Description: 1 volume (unpaged) : colour illustrations ; 16 x 27 cm.
  • Edition: First American edition.
  • Publisher: Brooklyn, N.Y. : Enchanted Lion Books, 2014, ©2014.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Translation of: Une rencontre.
Subject: Wordless picture books.
Foxes > Juvenile fiction.
Animal welfare > Juvenile fiction.
Boys > Conduct of life > Juvenile fiction.
Stories without words.
Wordless picture books.

Available copies

  • 0 of 1 copy available at Westcoast Early Learning Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Westcoast Early Learning Library CAMC 2014 (Text) 35200000727607 Childrens Fiction Volume hold Checked out 2024-05-28

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2014 November #1
    On wide, wordless pages, a fox leaves a snowy wood, looking for a warm spot near a little boy's cozy home, but his parents try to shoo it away. Undaunted, the rusty-red fox settles for the nearby greenhouse, and when the kind, inquisitive boy goes to check on the animal, he discovers that she has had a litter of kits. He quietly leaves them a basket of food and returns home to climb back in bed, but the mama fox and her babies remember his kindness, and before they go back to the woods, they leave a towering bouquet of flowers from the greenhouse on his bedroom floor. The sweet story is carried along by Camcam's gorgeous, intricate cut-paper dioramas, all of which are delicately highlighted with minimal, thin blue-ink strokes on snowy white paper and warmly lit from within. The careful lighting in each photographed illustration adds a remarkable depth of field, leaving corners of the woods in shadow and the houses suffused with glowing, pale orange light. A dreamy story perfect for bedtime. Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.
  • Horn Book Guide Reviews : Horn Book Guide Reviews 2015 Spring
    While his parents show only disdain, a boy is intrigued by a fox who takes up residence in the family's greenhouse. Later, the boy's quiet act of kindness yields an unexpected reward. With invitingly short and wide dimensions, this wordless book from France stands out for its exceptional, inventively lit illustrations of one snowy evening.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2014 September #1
    Flowing lines and subtle shifts of hue add visual grace notes to this wordless tale of gifts exchanged between a boy and a fox. Slipping sinuously through a snowy forest, a fox approaches a village and, after getting a hostile reception from adults, takes refuge in a greenhouse. A boy sees this and later creeps outside to leave a basket in the greenhouse as the fox, suckling four newly born kits, looks on. Later still, mother fox and kits climb into the sleeping boy's bedroom to leave an astonishing bouquet of larger-than-life flowers before silently departing. In the paint-and-cut-paper illustrations, leafless trees, finely decorated houses and even the flowers in the greenhouse are rendered in wintry blues and grays that make the glow of lights seen through windows seem achingly warm but remote. This contrast also adds a deeper warmth to the identically russet coats of both fox and boy, the only other real touches of color. Each scene is composed as a diorama and photograph ed, giving the illustrations an uncanny solidity and depth despite their paper-cutout origins. The oversized flowers invite thinking of this imported episode in symbolic or metaphorical terms…but it needs no analysis to be lovely. (Picture book. 6-8) Copyright Kirkus 2014 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2014 August #1

    An act of tender compassion is given (and repaid) in secret during an icy winter night in this memorable addition to the Stories Without Words series, the U.S. debut for this French artist, born Camille Garoche. The story concerns a sleek, rust-colored fox seen darting through a gnarled forest of pale lavender trees beneath swirling snowy skies. Drawn to the orange glow of a building in the distance, the fox is shooed away by the man and woman who live there, before taking shelter in their greenhouse. A small boy, whose red sweater perhaps serves as an early signal that he's an ally to the ruddy fox, sneaks outside to deliver a basket of food. As he sets it down, the full scope of his kindhearted action is revealed: the fox has four tiny kits snuggled under its bushy tail. Camcam creates her images by assembling cut-paper dioramas, which are then lit and photographed. The resulting images possess a subtle dimensionality while the story exudes a haunting winter magic and a strong sense of the way a small kindness can make an enormous difference. Ages 3–8. (Sept.)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2014 PWxyz LLC
  • School Library Journal Reviews : SLJ Reviews 2014 November

    PreS-Gr 1—In this wordless picture book, a fox enters a small town, looking for shelter. She is chased away by villagers but eventually finds refuge in an abandoned greenhouse. A little boy finds the fox and gives her and her newborn pups a basket of food. The fox family then returns the kindness by planting a magical garden inside the boy's room while he sleeps. The story is brief and simple enough for toddlers, but the beauty of its artwork will capture a much wider audience. Camcam's cut-paper illustrations add to the mystical elements of the work. The boy's bedroom is particularly impressive, with three-dimensional furniture and detailed toys; every item in the room looks as fragile and delicate as the wonderful magic that the fox has given to the boy. The panoramic style of the pictures makes this title ideal for a lap-sit storytime, and it will be a delight to read and to share.—Peter Blenski, Greenfield Public Library, WI

    [Page 78]. (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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