Making a Friend

by Alison McGhee (Author) Marc Rosenthal (Illustrator)

Making a Friend
Reading Level: K − 1st Grade
Clean, cold, white snow! Snow for sledding. Snow for catching on your tongue. Snow for making a SNOWMAN! Is there anything as wonderful as SNOW? Is there any better friend than a SNOWMAN? Snow isn't forever, though. The wind shifts, the weather warms and snow melts into spring. The Snowman has become something else--the fog, the rain. But, how can this boy forget his good friend? He doesn't...and he doesn't have to. Bestselling author, Alison McGhee reminds us all that nothing that has been cared for can ever disappear for good, for, "What you love will always be with you." And, this tender story about the power of friendship will stay with readers long after they turn the last page.
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Publishers Weekly

McGhee takes up an ethereal subject: longing for absent loved ones. A boy builds--and happily befriends--a snowman, which later melts in a spring thaw. "Where did you go?" the boy wonders. "Look," writes McGhee (Someday), as the seasons shift and the boy pours a bucket of water into a pond. "He is in the falling water, and the rain upon the ocean." Rosenthal's (I Must Have Bobo!) boxy houses and rural scenes speak of simpler times, and the soft, sepia outlines of his pencil drawings look like old lithographs. Visual hints of the snowman's lingering presence--ripples in the pond echo his charcoal facial features--underscore McGhee's message. (And just in case readers miss it, it's also spelled out in a refrain, "What you love will always be with you.") The success of the book is in the gentle rhythm created by McGhee's telegraphic text and Rosenthal's spot illustrations, and in its evocation of the long waits of childhood, so difficult for the young to endure. All ages. (Oct.)

Copyright 2011 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

School Library Journal

K-Gr 2--In minimal but evocative text, McGhee introduces a small boy who builds a snowman and becomes attached to his creation. When it inevitably melts in the spring, the boy wonders, "Where did he go?" He finds his snowman almost everywhere he turns--in the rain on the ocean, the fog in the hollow, the frost on the window, etc., and realizes, "What you love will always be with you." When winter returns, he builds another snowman and again enjoys the companionship. Similar in tone to Mo Willems's City Dog, Country Frog (Hyperion, 2010), this gentle story offers the same opportunity to discuss the cycle of love, loss, and emotional renewal. The digitally manipulated pencil illustrations have a retro look and are reminiscent of the work of Louis Slobodkin. There is a lot of white space, particularly on the pages where only the boy and the snowman are depicted, giving the impression that they are in their own special private world. A simple but deeply nuanced story that should resonate with children.--Grace Oliff, Ann Blanche Smith School, Hillsdale, NJ

Copyright 2011 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes

MCGHEE, Alison. Making a Friend.
In minimal but evocative text, McGhee introduces a small boy who builds a snowman and becomes attached to his creation. When it inevitably melts in the spring, the boy wonders, "Where did he go?" He finds his snowman almost everywhere he turns-in the rain on the ocean, the fog in the hollow, the frost on the window, etc., and realizes, "What you love will always be with you." When winter returns, he builds another snowman and again enjoys the companionship. Similar in tone to Mo Willems's City Dog, Country Frog (Hyperion, 2010), this gentle story offers the same opportunity to discuss the cycle of love, loss, and emotional renewal. The digitally manipulated pencil illustrations have a retro look and are reminiscent of the work of Louis Slobodkin. There is a lot of white space, particularly on the pages where only the boy and the snowman are depicted, giving the impression that they are in their own special private world. A simple but deeply nuanced story that should resonate with children.
SLJ, October 2011
Alison McGhee
Alison McGhee is the New York Times bestselling author of Someday, as well as Dear Sister, What I Leave Behind, Pablo and Birdy, Where We Are, Maybe a Fox with Kathi Appelt, Firefly Hollow, Little Boy, So Many Days, Star Bright, A Very Brave Witch, Dear Brother, and the Bink and Gollie books. Her other children's books include All Rivers Flow to the Sea, Countdown to Kindergarten, and Snap!. She lives in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and Laguna Beach, California. You can visit her at AlisonMcGhee.com.

Harry Bliss is an award-winning, nationally syndicated cartoonist and cover artist for the New Yorker. He is the illustrator of the New York Times bestselling books A Fine, Fine School by Sharon Creech and Diary of a Worm and Diary of a Spider, both written by Doreen Cronin. Mr. Bliss lives with his family in northern Vermont.
Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9781416989981
Lexile Measure
310
Guided Reading Level
E
Publisher
Atheneum Books for Young Readers
Publication date
October 20, 2011
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV051000 - Juvenile Fiction | Imagination & Play
JUV009100 - Juvenile Fiction | Concepts | Seasons
JUV017010 - Juvenile Fiction | Holidays & Celebrations | Christmas & Advent
Library of Congress categories
Friendship
Seasons
Snow
Snowmen

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