
Summary
Immerse yourself in a world reminiscent of a Brothers Grimm fairy tale with this gorgeously illustrated story about a reclusive fox, a mysterious tree, and the life-giving power of friendship.
BrindleFox refuses to be a friend, so he has no friends. He never lets anyone into his home, so he doesn’t bother to clean it. Moss and ivy weave through his furniture, and weeds and grasses grow on his floors and in his drawers. One morning, he discovers something unexpected-a tree has begun sp…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781546003724 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 154600372X |
| Author: | John Sandford |
| Publisher: | Little, Brown & Company |
| Imprint: | Worthy Books |
| Format: | Hardcover |
| Number of Pages: | 32 |
| Release Date: | 27 February 2024 |
| Weight: | 376g |
| Dimensions: | 246mm x 238mm x 14mm |
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Critics Review
How to make a friend?
Hardhearted BrindleFox doesn’t like anyone. The anthropomorphic fox’s house is dirty and overgrown with plants. And one day a tree starts to grow from his back. Branches, leaves, and berries sprout; creatures build homes in it. A heron swings from its branches, and BrindleFox fumes, chasing her away; returning the next day, she gathers brambleberries. Soon, BrindleFox discovers a brambleberry pie on his windowsill and eats it. He asks Heron incredulously why she made a pie for him. Another pie follows–but, more importantly, so does a remarkable change in personality as BrindleFox cleans himself and his house, removes the tree from his back and saws it into planks, and begins to build furniture, a project Heron enthusiastically and skillfully helps with. Heron continues baking, and in the ensuing years, she and BrindleFox consume pastries while sitting on expertly wrought wooden chairs, enjoying long talks and deep friendship. The moral of the story? “To have a friend, one must be a friend.” Children will appreciate this warm fable’s satisfying conclusion. What shines through in the sweet, simple telling is its message about kindness and the idea that cold hearts can thaw through patience and understanding. The oil-paint illustrations are standouts, their lush colors enlivening precise, folkloric details and enhancing settings. BrindleFox and Heron–actual enemies in nature–are expressive, fully realized protagonists.
Young readers will eagerly befriend these characters.
–Kirkus ReviewsAbout The Author
John Sandford
John Sandford retired after seven years as an art director with Cricket Magazine to pursue his creative projects full-time. He uses different approaches for each story to evoke mood, place, and the personality of characters. He studied painting and illustration at the American Academy of Art and illustrated his first picture book in 1978. Over the years, Sandford’s work has garnered many starred reviews as well as a Parents’ Choice Gold medal (The Terrible Hodag and the Animals Catchers by Caroline Arnold, 2006). John lives in Chicago.
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