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Summary
Summary
Leo isn't just a stuffed toy, he is Henry's best friend and brother. He is as real as a tree, a cloud, the sun, the moon, the stars, and the wind. But when the two are accidentally separated, no one in Henry's family believes Leo is real enough to find his way home.
With beautiful mixed-media paintings, the Caldecott Honor-winning artist Pamela Zagarenski explores the transcendent nature of friendship and love.
Author Notes
Pamela Zagarenski is the winner of two Caldecott Honors, and her books have been translated into many languages. As well as illustrating picture books, she creates sculptures and has a gift card line. She lives in Connecticut. Visit her website at www.pzagarenski.com .
Reviews (5)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Zagarenski (The Whisper) frames her splendid, tapestrylike paintings within a story that focuses their power. Henry's family loves him, but his insistence that his toy lion, Leo, has feelings is a problem. "Leo is a stuffed toy," his sister sniffs, "and toys aren't real." When Henry falls asleep on a hike and drops Leo in the woods, his mother assures him that they'll search for Leo in the morning. In a series of hauntingly lovely wordless spreads, Zagarenski returns to the forest under the warm light of a full moon, where a bear, fox, and hare discover Leo. They sip out of mugs while Leo draws a picture of his house; he rides home on the bear's back. When Henry spots Leo on the lawn the next morning, his sister says wonderingly, "But I looked in that very spot last night," allowing readers to share in Leo's secret. Lost-toy stories can be frightening, but Zagarenski presents the forest as a place of beauty and refuge, and the closing endpapers suggest that Leo and Henry find more to do there. Ages 4-7. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Horn Book Review
Henry's sister does not understand about Henry's dear lion, Leo: "Leo is a stuffed toy, and toys aren't real." Henry knows better, and on a family walk in the Nearby Woods, he can tell that Leo is enjoying himself. Indeed, Zagarenski depicts Leo with eyes that look lifelike while still clearly made of glass buttons. Henry gets tired on the walk, so his Papa carries him, and children will likely notice immediately that Leo is not in his arms. Back home: "Leo will be scared," Henry tells his mother, but she won't let him return to the woods to look for Leo until the next morning. As Henry lies mournfully in bed, a large window frames the moon, with stars trickling toward his bed. The next pages are wordless spreads in lush blues and greens showing Leo in the nighttime woods accompanied by animals that resemble the stuffed animals in Henry's room -- a bear, a fox, a hare. These animals set off toward Henry's house, Leo riding on the bear's shoulders, and in the morning, Henry finds Leo, safe and sound, right outside. As in her previous books, such as Sleep like a Tiger (rev. 11/12), Zagarenski's art features crowns floating over the heads of her characters. She uses layers of paint over found materials and, in the story, layers the imaginary over layers of reality. The interplay between what is real and what is imaginary -- and Henry's thoughts on the subject -- will make this a fertile book for children and adults to discuss. susan dove lempke (c) Copyright 2016. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Booklist Review
Zagarenski enlightens young readers with an enchanted story of love and friendship between a young boy and his favorite toy. Though his family tries to tell him his beloved Leo isn't real, Henry and the plush lion are inseparable, and when he accidentally leaves Leo behind on a walk in the woods, the boy is disconsolate. Although his parents assure him they'll look first thing in the morning, Henry is still worried. But back in the woods, something magical takes place while Henry fitfully sleeps: in wordless spreads, Zagarenski's warm, lustrous, and whimsical multimedia paintings depict Leo conspiring with other forest denizens to find a way back home. The little lion's plight is clear, thanks to the animals' expressive forms and some visual hints, while the jewel-toned palette cultivates a welcoming, mystical atmosphere. The transition from Henry's story, rendered in simple text, to Leo's is seamless, and the sumptuous imagery is packed with delightful details, which are a pleasure to hunt for. Little ones will be entranced.--Lock, Anita Copyright 2016 Booklist
School Library Journal Review
PreS-Gr 1-In this spare picture book, Zagarenski explores the familiar theme of a stuffed animal becoming real. Leo, a stuffed toy lion, is Henry's favorite. Henry has other toys, for sure, such as a bear, bunny, and fox. But Leo is special, with his glass button eyes and jointed and movable parts, and he and Henry are inseparable. One day the family decides to go for a walk in the woods, and Henry excitedly declares, "Leo loves the woods!" Henry's disbelieving sister scolds him, though, saying, "Leo is a stuffed toy, and toys aren't real!" Henry knows better as they enjoy a stroll through the Nearby Woods. Unfortunately, after a long, tiring walk, Leo is accidentally left behind. Heading out again into the night, the family searches, but the little friend is nowhere to be found. Henry is inconsolable as he lies in bed, but magic is happening in the Nearby Woods. Henry's stuffed toys transform into real animals, and the bear, the rabbit, and the fox guide Leo safely home. The next morning, the family finds him in the garden, looking every bit like a stuffed animal again. However, Leo quietly whispers a real "I love you" into Henry's ear. The full-bleed illustrations are done in mixed media and have a soft, dreamy quality to them. As the people and toys drift between the real world and the magical one, ghostly crowns appear over their heads. The nighttime scenes in the forest contain fantasylike elements, contrasting with the more realistic ones in the real world. VERDICT The stunning, sumptuous artwork and familiar themes make this a serene and satisfying bedtime story for young children, with just the right amount of dramatic tension.-Roxanne Burg, Orange County Public Library, CA © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
The bond between a child and a beloved stuffed lion is put to the test.Henry, a white boy old enough to read chapter books and young enough to feel that his beloved Leo is real, goes for a walk in the woods with his family. Zagarenskis text is prosaically documentary in tone: Henry could never quite say exactly what it was that made Leo different.[M]aybe it was his jointed and moveable parts. Big sister (also white) scoffs at Henrys pronouncement that Leo loves the woods, but Henry remains firm in his conviction, especially when, at bedtime, Henry realizes that Leo is gone. The tale takes flight in a wordless sequence in which Leo finds friends in the forest. A bear, a fox, and a rabbitseen among Henrys toys in the opening pagespeer from the trees and gather to help Leo get home by morning. Zagarenskis mixed-media, edge-to-edge art is richly textured, jewel-toned, and dreamily evocative, with a delicious sense of mystery and enchantment. Geometric swaths of color are layered and blended to suggest sunlight, moonlight, and shadow, walls and windows among the trees. Henry, Leo, and the family and forest creatures are graced with halolike crowns; a teapot and cups appear on the forest floor. Invite young readers to talk about this visual feast for the imagination, and something magical may happen. (Picture book. 3-7) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.