Breathe

by Scott Magoon (Author) Scott Magoon (Illustrator)

Breathe
Reading Level: K − 1st Grade

"Richly composed and sweetly appealing--just right for baby storytimes as well as one-to-one sharing." --Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"Perfectly suitable as a read-aloud." --School Library Journal

Take a deep breath and dive into a day in the life of a baby whale, told with luminous illustrations and spare text, with a fresh twist on a timeless message.

Swim! Play all day. Breathe.

This simply told story follows a young whale on a journey of discovery as he experiences his first day at sea on his own! He swims, explores, and makes friends in his marine habitat. After a day of independence, this little whale delights in returning home to his mother. Young readers will be drawn to Scott Magoon's reassuring story of adventure.

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Publishers Weekly

Magoon (The Boy Who Cried Bigfoot!) rejoices in the life of a young beluga whale, focusing on images of serenity and encouragement over educational aims or warnings of environmental danger. By alternating underwater scenes with commands to breathe, Magoon provides an immediate sense of how the pace and scale of a whale's life differs from that of a human. "Breathe, little whale!" he begins, as the smiling beluga, seen next to its mother, lets out a puff of watery spray. Magoon's digital illustrations add piquant touches of special-effects magic: trails of sparkly bubbles follow the diving whales in the icy-blue water, the depths of a vertical spread glow with a bioluminescent green, tendrils of sound curl out from the small whale to fill the ocean ("Listen to the sea. Sing"). Arctic animals and fish dot the landscape, and mother is always nearby: "Most of all, love... be loved." It's a pleasure simply to enjoy the beluga's existence, though readers should readily recognize that Magoon's directives to "make new friends" and "find another way up" apply to them, too. Ages 4-8. Agent: Rebecca Sherman, Writers House. (Apr.)

Copyright 2014 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

School Library Journal

PreS-Gr 1--With the encouragement of its mother, a young whale spends the day exploring, making new friends, finding shipwrecks, and swimming past glaciers, while intermittently pausing to "breathe" during its busy day. When the whale encounters a polar bear and becomes frightened, its mother soon reappears and assures its safety. This comforting tale not only gives youngsters the opportunity to explore the ocean alongside a whale but also subtly reminds them of the importance of slowing down to take a break every once in a while. Magoon's illustrations, which were rendered digitally, are vibrant and expansive, each filling a spread with vivid shades of blue. The minimal text is laid out in clear, big font, supporting the impressive illustrations without ever overshadowing them. With its succinct text and sprawling pictures, this story is perfectly suitable as a read-aloud. Pair it with Stephanie St. Pierre's What the Sea Saw (Peachtree, 2006) for a gentle, ocean-themed storytime.--Laura J. Giunta, Garden City Public Library, NY

Copyright 2014 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes

A very young white whale swims into the wider world of the arctic seas, celebrating first adventures of the very young.

Magoon's digital art captures the colors and crisp, airy light of the Arctic setting; cartoon lines and wide eyes present creatures above and under the ice as friendly, rounded and smiling. Even the polar bear—seen against the sky through an ice hole as a dark shadow, possibly threatening—is fairly benign. The little whale (clearly a baby beluga but not named as such) is doing the work that toddlers do—exploring the world with mama nearby. The few words of the text speak both to whale baby and, by extension, to the listener: "Play all day // and swim, / and swim, / and swim. // Breathe." This last ("Breathe") appears on a double-page spread in which the young whale is surrounded by the vast sea, snowy mountains, and a pale, bright sun. Then a dive changes the palette from the pale blues and whites of the surface through greeny yellows and finally to dark: Here, what was perhaps an arctic whaler, stilled and slightly ghostly, sits on the seafloor. The simple adventure concludes with an anthropomorphic yet welcome invitation: "Most of all, love / and be loved."

Richly composed and sweetly appealing—just right for baby storytimes as well as one-to-one sharing. (Picture book. 6 mos.-3)—Kirkus, STARRED REVIEW
Scott Magoon
Scott Magoon has illustrated many critically-acclaimed picture books, including the New York Times bestselling Rescue & Jessica by Jessica Kensky and Patrick Downes, which also received a Schneider Family Book Award, Straw by Amy Krouse Rosenthal, and Misunderstood Shark by Ame Dyckman. He is the author-illustrator of Breathe, which was named a Kirkus Reviews Best Read Aloud and a Best Book of the Year by the HuffPost and Chicago Public Library. Scott lives in the Boston area with his wife and two sons. Visit him online at ScottMagoon.com.
Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9781442412583
Lexile Measure
170
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Simon & Schuster/Paula Wiseman Books
Publication date
April 20, 2014
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV039090 - Juvenile Fiction | Social Themes | New Experience
JUV010000 - Juvenile Fiction | Bedtime & Dreams
JUV002170 - Juvenile Fiction | Animals | Marine Life
Library of Congress categories
Animals
Infancy
Whales
White whale
Capitol Choices: Noteworthy Books for Children and Teens
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