
STORIES IN RHYME.This past Tuesday, the BYU Bookstore hosted their annual Holiday Book Talk on campus (sponsored by the Farnsworth Juvenile Literature Library HBLL). Visit Safe Kids USA at Īnd/or the Klass Kids Foundation for some tips: Climbing down from the tree, Sammy races home before Mama comes in offering, "What a perfect child you've been – / Want to give those skates a spin?" Children will break down giggling.Īll's well that ends well in this funny, somewhat cautionary tale, but parents may want to use the opportunity to start a discussion about safety. Observant youngsters, however, will notice that the dog has been catching glimpses of all the action. Meanwhile, Mama has been oblivious to Sammy's absence as she unleashes the dog, tends to the baby, and does other homey chores.

With the kite, she soars high above the town and is lucky enough to land safely in a tree on her street. In comic succession, all captured in sunny yellow, loose and loopy watercolors, Sammy bumps and collides with people, including a wedding party and a parade, and becomes entangled with, among other things, a bridal veil and a kite. The rhyming text never falters as it picks up the manic pace. Quickly then, and quicker still, / Till the scenery's blurring past – / Sammy's going VERY fast!" But Sammy does not anticipate the steep slope down: "Slow at first, she glides downhill. In a gorgeously illustrated full-page spread, young readers, like Sammy, will be dizzy with glee at the view from the hilltop of the town below. In ever widening circles she skates until she is out the door and on Hawthorn Hill. She tries them out, first in the hall, then through the kitchen and the den. Like all good protagonists, Sammy cannot resist. You don't know how! / I can't help you – not right now." The cover painting of an exuberant Samantha on roller skates, arms high and wide, bright-eyed and smiling, tells it all! Sammy cannot wait to try her new skates, but Mama tells her, "No Samantha.
