More

by I C Springman (Author) Brian Lies (Illustrator)

More
Reading Level: K − 1st Grade
One magpie,
lots of stuff,
and a few friendly mice
show us that less is
more.
This innovative and spare picture book asks the question: When is MORE more than
enough? Can a team of well-intentioned mice save their friend from hoarding too
much stuff? With breathtaking illustrations from the award-winning Brian Lies, this
book about conservation wraps an important message in a beautiful package.
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Paperback
$7.99

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Publishers Weekly

Lies's (Bats at the Ballgame) marvelously lifelike paintings of a kleptomaniac magpie and a mouse with superior judgment do most of the storytelling in a story anchored on debut author Springman's string of quantity words ("Lots. Plenty. A bit much"). The first spread shows a single word at left ("Nothing"), a long expanse of blank backdrop, and a despondent magpie all alone at the far right. A mouse offers a glass marble to the delighted magpie: "Something." A Lego block makes "a few," and a coin makes "several"; the magpie's three treasures are shown in its nest under the bird's dramatically enlarged feet. In no time, the magpie assembles mounds of junk: "Way too much." The mouse calls a halt—"Enough!"—as the magpie is buried under its own treasure. The fable offers a finely drawn, restrained "less is more" lesson about attachment to things (so finely drawn, in fact, that some children with overflowing toy boxes may not recognize themselves). Lies's striking paintings of the magpie's flashy wings, swooping tail, and gleaming eyes—as good as any field guide's—are the story's real treasures. Ages 4-8. (Mar.)

Copyright 2012 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

School Library Journal

PreS-Gr 3--Told in a spare 27 words, this visual tale features an inauspicious magpie, a corvid well known for its intelligence and acquisitiveness. The three-part tale can be summarized as "more...less...enough." The magpie and a mouse start with nothing, find a few shiny, cast-off items, and hustle them to their nests. Then suddenly, and not surprisingly, their nests are bursting with stuff: keys, coins, LEGOs, marbles, combs, necklaces, Tinkertoys, padlocks, and more. Young readers will find themselves in a Waldo world of things to point to and identify. The paintings are highly realistic and up close, in acrylic on handmade paper, and the text is hand lettered, which brings home its ecological message. The tide turns on one of the darkest-hued pages, when the magpie, famously reflected in a mirror, recognizes that enough is enough. But it is too late, and here lies the message. This is a timely, clearly needed fable for contemporary society as it tries to unravel itself from excessive materialism. Ideal for discussions about reducing consumption.--Sara Lissa Paulson, American Sign Language and English Lower School PS 347, New York City

Copyright 2012 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes

"Dramatic paintings add depth and foreboding to a lesson about excessive materialism."—Kirkus"The fable offers a finely drawn, restrained 'less is more' lesson about attachment to things."—Publishers Weekly"This is a timely, clearly needed fable for contemporary society as it tries to unravel itself from excessive materialism. Ideal for discussions about reducing consumption."—School Library Journal, starred review "This minimally told story delivers a strong antimaterialism message, and kids with a habit of amassing stuff may, like Magpie, recognize their own reflections."—Booklist "The lesson about living simply carries here, gracefully communicated both in the illustrations and the spare text."—Bulletin"The message here is overt, but the treatment is clever, effective, and commendably understated."—Horn Book
I C Springman
I. C. Springman is a small-house person in a McMansion-loving world. She lives as simply as possible with one husband, three dogs, and too many books somewhere down south. More was written for her grandsons, Mason and Jack, with the hope that one day there will be enough for all. Brian Lies is the author and/or illustrator of more than two dozen children's books, including his New York Times best-selling bat books (Bats at the Beach, Bats at the Library, and Bats at the Ballgame).  He lives in Massachusetts with his wife, daughter, and two cats, and battles clutter in his garage, basement, and studio.
Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780547610832
Lexile Measure
-
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Clarion Books
Publication date
March 20, 2012
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV002040 - Juvenile Fiction | Animals | Birds
JUV002180 - Juvenile Fiction | Animals | Mice, Hamsters, Guinea Pigs, etc.
JUV009030 - Juvenile Fiction | Concepts | Counting & Numbers
Library of Congress categories
Mice
Conduct of life
Magpies
New England Book Award
Winner 2012 - 2012
Capitol Choices: Noteworthy Books for Children and Teens
Recommended 2013 - 2013

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