We All Play

Book Cover
Average Rating
Publisher
Greystone Books
Publication Date
2021
Language
English

Description

A BEST CHILDREN’S BOOK OF THE YEAR: New York Times, Washington Post, New York Public Library, Kirkus Reviews, Globe and Mail, Horn Book, and Boston GlobeSTARRED Reviews in Kirkus, Publisher’s Weekly, The Horn Book, School Library JournalA 2022 Best Book for BabiesFrom Julie Flett, the beloved author and illustrator of Birdsong, comes a joyous new book about playtime for babies, toddlers, and kids up to age 7.Animals and kids love to play! This wonderful book celebrates playtime and the connection between children and the natural world. Beautiful illustrations show:
  • birds who chase and chirp!
  • bears who wiggle and wobble!
  • whales who swim and squirt!
  • owls who peek and peep!
  • and a diverse group of kids who love to do the same, shouting:
We play too! / kimêtawânaw mînaAt the end of the book, animals and children gently fall asleep after a fun day of playing outside, making this book a great bedtime story. A beautiful ode to the animals and humans we share our world with, We All Play belongs on every bookshelf.This book also includes:
  • A glossary of Cree words for wild animals in the book
  • A pronunciation guide and link to audio pronunciation recordings

More Details

Contributors
Flett, Julie Illustrator, Author
ISBN
9781771646086

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Author Notes

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Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
These books have the appeal factors own voices, and they have the genres "picture books for children" and "canadian fiction"; the subjects "children," "cree (eeyou) (north american people)," and "canadian people"; and include the identity "indigenous."
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With minimal text and deceptively simple artwork, both of these feel-good books celebrate young children at play: African-American Peter frolics in the city after a big snowfall while Indigenous children romp alongside woodland creatures across seasons in We All Play -- NoveList Advisor
With minimal text, these stories encourage children to take playtime inspiration from baby animals (We All Play) and newfound friends (How to Two). How to Two is a counting book while We All Play incorporates Cree vocabulary into the text. -- Malia Jackson
These books have the genres "picture books for children" and "canadian fiction"; and the subject "canadian people."
My heart fills with happiness - Gray Smith, Monique
These books have the appeal factors own voices, and they have the genres "picture books for children" and "canadian fiction"; the subjects "children," "cree (eeyou) (north american people)," and "canadian people"; and include the identity "indigenous."
These books have the appeal factors own voices, and they have the genre "picture books for children"; the subjects "cree (eeyou) (north american people)," "canadian people," and "north american people"; and include the identity "indigenous."
These books have the appeal factors own voices, and they have the genres "picture books for children" and "canadian fiction"; the subjects "cree (eeyou) (north american people)," "canadian people," and "north american people"; and include the identity "indigenous."
These feel-good own voices picture books teach children kindness (When We Are Kind) and cooperation (We All Play) through Indigenous traditions and sayings. -- CJ Connor
These simple picture books show animals moving in all kinds of ways and wiggly young readers won't be able to resist moving along with them, making these great readalouds. Play has realistic, muted illustrations; Head to Toe's are bright and cartoony. -- NoveList Contributor

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NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Although each of these Canadian First Nations authors writes both fiction and nonfiction for younger and older readers, both have received special recognition for their bilingual books for the young featuring both English and Cree words, with mixed-media illustration styles that celebrate Indigenous children and their families. -- Lindsey Dunn
These authors' works have the subjects "cree (eeyou) (north american people)," "canadian people," and "north american people"; and include the identity "indigenous."
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These authors' works have the genre "canadian fiction"; the subjects "cree (eeyou) (north american people)," "canadian people," and "north american people"; and include the identity "indigenous."
These authors' works have the subjects "cree (eeyou) (north american people)" and "canadian people"; illustrations that are "textured illustrations" and "colorful illustrations"; and include the identity "indigenous."
These authors' works have the genres "picture books for children" and "books with minimal text"; and the subject "indigenous peoples of north america."
These authors' works have the genres "picture books for children" and "canadian fiction"; the subject "boys"; and illustrations that are "muted illustrations," "textured illustrations," and "colorful illustrations."
These authors' works have the genre "books with minimal text"; the subjects "cree (eeyou) (north american people)," "canadian people," and "north american people"; and include the identity "indigenous."
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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

This beautifully illustrated book introduces a series of young animals at play, then relates their activities to those of children. Spanning eight pages, the first of four sections in the minimalist text reads, "Animals hide and hop / and sniff and sneak / and peek and peep. / We play too! / kimêtawânaw mîna." Closing each section, the Cree phrase reiterates, "We play too." The second section involves aquatic animals, followed by children swimming, and the third features snakes, bison, and bears in motion, concluding with kids sledding down a snow-covered hill. The final section includes bats roosting, wolf pups yawning, and drowsy children going to sleep. Flett, a Cree-Métis writer and illustrator who lives in Canada, chooses pairs of words that read aloud well. An appended list pairs English words for 13 animals (plus child and baby) with their Cree equivalents. In the art, the simplified forms of animals and children are often silhouetted against parchment-like backgrounds, while color and shading help define the characters' shapes. A handsome, understated picture book affirming our oneness with nature.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

Cree-Métis artist Flett (Birdsong) starts with quiet, elegant portraits of animals at play attended by brief, motion-filled lines of text. Velvety dark brown rabbits jump across the page ("Animals hide/ and hop"); a fox investigates a turtle as kits peer timidly from the page's edge ("and sniff/ and sneak"); an owlet peeks out from the page as others cluster together, their new wings delicately etched ("and peek/and peep"). Then a group of small children of various skin tones appears, leaping, jumping, and lying on their backs in tall grass as butterflies flit above. "We play too! kimêtawânaw mîna" they say. An author's note defines the Cree phrase as "living in relationship and in care to one another" and discusses the kinship between animals and people, whether "running and hopping through the grass or... pondering creatures in the creek." In spare compositions, Flett aptly underlines this idea by showing animals and humans embracing play in similar ways (snakes slide, children sled down a hill in the snow), until at last, "slowly, side by side," everyone sleeps. Also includes a glossary and pronunciation guide. Ages up to 7. Agent: Steven Malk, Writers House. (May)

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School Library Journal Review

PreS-Gr 2--This delightful picture book features woodland animals, found in North America, mirroring playtime for children: "Animals hide and hop and sneak and sniff and peep. We play, too! kimêtawânaw mîna." The children are happy, playing and tiring themselves out, then resting by the end of the book. It is a great bedtime story. The words in English are simple and could easily be memorized and then recognized by early readers. The illustrations are warm and inviting; the animal families are depicted in soft, smudged painterly colors. At the end of the book is a glossary of Cree words for the animals in singular, plural, and diminutive forms, along with words for child and baby. The pronunciation for these words can be found on a website. The author's note provides a summary of the book, explaining the kinship between humans and animals in Cree culture and the interconnectedness to "the land, plants, the earth, wind, water and sky." VERDICT Add to any library collection and pair it with Julie Flett's Birdsong.--Danielle Burbank, Farmington, NM

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Horn Book Review

In Flett's lively and beautifully illustrated story, animals engage in all sorts of playful behaviors, on land and in the water. Each spread depicts one or two species, with two action verbs describing their actions. Bunnies and grasshoppers "hide and hop." Owls "peek and peep." Belugas "swim and squirt." Interspersed spreads depict a group of children who, likewise, run, swim, climb, and sled, declaring, "We play too! kimetawanaw mina." But all that activity can be tiring, and when the animals snuggle up outside and rest together, the children do also. With only four or five words on most of the spreads, the text is spare, lilting, and sensory, emphasizing action. The pictures are similarly simple and playful, with plenty of space warmly surrounding the figures. A bold, dynamic page design and vibrant textures enhance the images, and the children's gorgeous skin tones range from deep copper-brown to beige. The back matter includes a list of animal names in English and in Cree, a pronunciation guide to Cree words, and a thoughtful author's note about human play and the connectedness of people, animals, and nature. Autumn Allen May/June 2021 p.107(c) Copyright 2021. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Kirkus Book Review

Everyone loves to play! Award-winning author/illustrator Flett shares the joyful antics of young animals as they romp in much the same way as human children. The rhythmic text offers both rich vocabulary and a page-turning chant. Woodland animals "hide and hop / and sniff and sneak" while Indigenous children, depicted in differing shades of brown, run, skip, jump, and hunt for butterflies. "We play too! kimêtawânaw mîna," they proclaim in the refrain. Aquatic animals "swim and squirt / and bubble and bend" while children swim under the water and float on its surface, in inner tubes. On the prairie, snakes "slip and slide" through the grass while buffalo "rumble and roll." And bears "wiggle and wobble" as both they and children play (in separate double-page spreads) in the snow. At last, "side by side, animals fall asleep," and after a day full of fun, "we do too. nîstanân mîna." The animals are not named within the primary text, leaving it to readers to identify the hopping bunnies, the spouting beluga whale calves, and the yawning wolf pups. Flett's characteristically minimalist compositions are deceptively simple. Readers who slow down to look will be charmed by the cricket that hops in tandem with a rabbit and the fox that stares in bemusement at a turtle. This celebration of nature is sprinkled with words from the Cree language, and a closing glossary provides both Cree and English names of the animals depicted; a note provides guidance on Cree pronunciation for readers not familiar with the language. Simple text and bold, graphic illustrations celebrate our interconnection with the creatures who share our world. (author's note) (Picture book. 3-7) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

This beautifully illustrated book introduces a series of young animals at play, then relates their activities to those of children. Spanning eight pages, the first of four sections in the minimalist text reads, "Animals hide and hop / and sniff and sneak / and peek and peep. / We play too! / kimêtawânaw mîna." Closing each section, the Cree phrase reiterates, "We play too." The second section involves aquatic animals, followed by children swimming, and the third features snakes, bison, and bears in motion, concluding with kids sledding down a snow-covered hill. The final section includes bats roosting, wolf pups yawning, and drowsy children going to sleep. Flett, a Cree-Métis writer and illustrator who lives in Canada, chooses pairs of words that read aloud well. An appended list pairs English words for 13 animals (plus child and baby) with their Cree equivalents. In the art, the simplified forms of animals and children are often silhouetted against parchment-like backgrounds, while color and shading help define the characters' shapes. A handsome, understated picture book affirming our oneness with nature. Preschool-Grade 2. Copyright 2021 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2021 Booklist Reviews.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Cree-Métis artist Flett (Birdsong) starts with quiet, elegant portraits of animals at play attended by brief, motion-filled lines of text. Velvety dark brown rabbits jump across the page ("Animals hide/ and hop"); a fox investigates a turtle as kits peer timidly from the page's edge ("and sniff/ and sneak"); an owlet peeks out from the page as others cluster together, their new wings delicately etched ("and peek/and peep"). Then a group of small children of various skin tones appears, leaping, jumping, and lying on their backs in tall grass as butterflies flit above. "We play too! kimêtawânaw mîna" they say. An author's note defines the Cree phrase as "living in relationship and in care to one another" and discusses the kinship between animals and people, whether "running and hopping through the grass or... pondering creatures in the creek." In spare compositions, Flett aptly underlines this idea by showing animals and humans embracing play in similar ways (snakes slide, children sled down a hill in the snow), until at last, "slowly, side by side," everyone sleeps. Also includes a glossary and pronunciation guide. Ages up to 7. Agent: Steven Malk, Writers House. (May)

Copyright 2021 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2021 Publishers Weekly.
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School Library Journal Reviews

PreS-Gr 2—This delightful picture book features woodland animals, found in North America, mirroring playtime for children: "Animals hide and hop and sneak and sniff and peep. We play, too! kimêtawânaw mîna." The children are happy, playing and tiring themselves out, then resting by the end of the book. It is a great bedtime story. The words in English are simple and could easily be memorized and then recognized by early readers. The illustrations are warm and inviting; the animal families are depicted in soft, smudged painterly colors. At the end of the book is a glossary of Cree words for the animals in singular, plural, and diminutive forms, along with words for child and baby. The pronunciation for these words can be found on a website. The author's note provides a summary of the book, explaining the kinship between humans and animals in Cree culture and the interconnectedness to "the land, plants, the earth, wind, water and sky." VERDICT Add to any library collection and pair it with Julie Flett's Birdsong.—Danielle Burbank, Farmington, NM

Copyright 2021 School Library Journal.

Copyright 2021 School Library Journal.
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