FICTION

Cub's Big World

illus. by Joe Cepeda. 32p. Houghton Harcourt. Nov. 2013. Tr $16.99. ISBN 9780544057395.
COPY ISBN
PreS-K—Cub's world has been small and white, with just her mother in an icy cave. One day, it is time to leave the cave, and the outside sights and sensations are thrilling. Cub slides "down, down, down" a slippery hill, "fast, fast, fast! The world was fun!" until she cannot find her mother. She looks for Mom's black nose among the stark white, but is fooled several times by other wildlife (captured by the heartbreaking sentence, "The world was too big for a cub with no mom."). The young bear is found at the end and reassured that her mother will be "close by till you're big, too." Vivid but not flowery, gentle but exciting, Thomson's measured voice expertly captures the wonder and fear of a young child exploring unfamiliar territory alone. Cepeda's full-spread oil and acrylic paintings, in cool tones of white, blue, purple, and brown, evoke the cold, desolate beauty of the Arctic as well as the warm, loving emotions of parent and child. This story will play well with the storytime crowd, can be enjoyed independently by beginning readers, and will certainly make for a cozy one-on-one experience. Cub's Big World is a big must-have.—Rebecca Dash Donsky, New York Public Library
A polar bear cub's first venture outside introduces her to a dazzling arctic landscape. Cub wonders at colors she's never seen, new geography, and the sheer expanse of the world. When a tumble down a hill separates her from her mother, Cub must use what she knows to find her, and the suspense is toddler-perfect. Cepeda's oil and acrylic paintings are textured and luminous.
A polar bear cub’s first venture outside the womblike cave she shares with her mother introduces her to a dazzling arctic landscape. Cub wonders at colors she’s never seen (“‘Blue,’ said Mom. ‘Blue,’ whispered Cub”), new geography, and the sheer expanse of the world (it is “big, BIG, BIG!”). When a tumble down a hill (“Fast, fast, fast! The world was fun!”) separates parent and child, Cub must use what she knows (“Mom’s nose was black. Cub looked for one black thing in a white, white world”) to find her again, meeting some new animals along the way. Cepeda’s oil and acrylic paintings are textured and luminous, introducing endless variety to the limited palette of whites, blues, and blacks and using perspective to evoke both the vastness of the world and the comforting intimacy of the parent-child relationship. The suspense is toddler-perfect, with Mom appearing the moment it all becomes too much, and Thomson’s strong, simple prose, just a few brief sentences per page, is reassuring without veering into the treacly. Cub’s agency is quietly encouraged, tempered by Mom’s promise that “the world is big. I’ll be close by till you’re big, too,” and lessons in visual learning and categorization are neatly woven into Cub’s search. Lap-sit ready, with a built-in hug at the end. claire e. gross

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