Available Formats
Sun Flower Lion
By (Author) Kevin Henkes
Illustrated by Kevin Henkes
HarperCollins Publishers Inc
Greenwillow Books
16th February 2023
United States
Children
Fiction
813.6
Board book
36
Width 184mm, Height 184mm
327g
As brilliant as can be.Kirkus Reviews(starred review)
A simple but thought-provoking story.Booklist(starred review)
Endearing.Horn Book(starred review)
A must-have for all collections.School Library Journal(starred review)
A sun. A flower. And a lion. With three visual motifs, three colors, and fewer than 200 words, renowned Caldecott Medal winner and #1New York Times-bestseller Kevin Henkes cracks open the wide world and the youngest childs endless imagination. This irresistible board book is a must-have for every reader and every family and is a perfect gift for a new baby.
On a warm morning, a little lion sleeps under a sun that shines so brightly, it looks like a flower. He dreams the flower is as big as the sun. He dreams the flower is a cookie. He lets his imagination soar.
Caldecott Medal winner Kevin Henkes uses simple shapes, limited colors, and a pitch-perfect text to tell Lions story in this transcendent board book.Sun Flower Lionintroduces emerging readers to short chapters, action verbs, and adjectives, while bright illustrations transform simple shapes into something magical.
Sun Flower Lionwill shine at story time and bedtime and for young children just learning how to turn the pages and read on their own.
A sun, a flower, and a lion. . . . Henkes creates an impeccably designed story thats rewarding for toddlers and early readers alike. . . . With imagination at its center, this participatory read-aloud also cleverly introduces the concept of simile and metaphor. . . . As brilliant as can be. Kirkus Reviews(starred review) Masterfully employing brush and ink, with a striking color palette . . . Henkes creates a simple but thought-provoking story. Using panel illustrations, the book is divided into chapters, setting the pace of the narrative and helping the reader understand comparisons between items. . . . A perfect book for storytime reading or family bedtime sharing. Booklist (starred review) Meet the sun . . . a flower that looks like a lion; and a lion, who sees the flower and dreams about a field of them. . . . A perfectly paced picture book . . . An endearing, seemingly simple story with a wide-eyed and memorable protagonist, whose adventures will delight preschoolers and support and encourage those taking first steps toward reading. Horn Book (starred review) A white circle with a scalloped yellow borderis it the sun A flower A lion Its all three. . . . A great pick for beginning readers. . . . With a return to a . . . limited color palette like that of Henkess award-winning Kittens First Full Moon, this is a must-have for all collections. School Library Journal (starred review) Simple words and repeating forms draw beginning readers into this iterative volume by Henkes. Its central visual element, a circle with a ruffled edge, could signify the sun, a flower, or a lion with a maneand here, its all three. . . . Yellow spreads convey warmth and light . . . in this lighthearted reading exercise. Publishers Weekly As demonstrated in A Parade of Elephants, Henkes is a master in rendering the simple fascinating . . . A story thats warm and . . . gently humorous. . . . Two-color art, in shades of black and yellow, centers on the ruffled yellow circle that is variously sun, flower, and face of lion. . . . Perfect as a title to delight pre-readers and offer satisfying read-along opportunities. Bulletin of the Center for Childrens Books Highly acclaimed author and illustrator Kevin Henkes captures simple beauties of nature in his new picture bookSun Flower Lion. . . . This short, concise chapter book . . . is easy to comprehend and features common things of interest to children ages four to seven, making it a perfect addition for homes and classrooms of preschool and early elementary school-aged students. Portland Book Review Theres something new under the sun: Sun Flower Lion is a fresh spin on the traditional cumulative tale. . . . Imagination, not action, fuels the narrative. . . . [Henkes] spur[s] toddlers to look for similarities among images. The book concludes with a cozy, applause-worthy curtain call. Shelf Awareness
Kevin Henkes is the author and illustrator of more than fifty critically acclaimed and award-winning picture books, beginning readers, and novels. He received the Caldecott Medal for Kitten's First Full Moon in 2005, and Waiting won a Caldecott Honor and Geisel Honor in 2016. Kevin Henkes is also the creator of a number of picture books featuring his mouse characters, including the #1 New York Times bestsellers Lilly's Big Day and Wemberly Worried, the Caldecott Honor Book Owen, and the beloved Lilly's Purple Plastic Purse. His most recent mouse character, Penny, was introduced in Penny and Her Song; her story continued in Penny and Her Doll and Penny and Her Marble (a Geisel Honor Book). Bruce Handy, in a New York Times Book Review piece about A Good Day, wrote, "It should be said: Kevin Henkes is a genius." Kevin Henkes received two Newbery Honors for novels-one for The Year of Billy Miller, and the other for Olive's Ocean. Also among his fiction for older readers are the novels Junonia, Bird Lake Moon, The Birthday Room, and Sun & Spoon. Kevin Henkes has been published by Greenwillow Books since the release of his first book, All Alone, in 1981. His fiftieth book, the picture book Egg, was published in January 2017. Most recently, he is the author of In the Middle of Fall, Winter Is Here, Summer Song, A Parade of Elephants, Sweeping Up the Heart, and Penny and Her Sled. He lives with his family in Madison, Wisconsin. www.kevinhenkes.com.