Hello, Rain!
(Libby/OverDrive eBook, Kindle)

Book Cover
Average Rating
Contributors
Maclear, Kyo Author
Turnham, Chris Illustrator
Published
Chronicle Books LLC , 2021.
Status
Available from Libby/OverDrive

Available Platforms

Libby/OverDrive
Titles may be read via Libby/OverDrive. Libby/OverDrive is a free app that allows users to borrow and read digital media from their local library, including ebooks, audiobooks, and magazines. Users can access Libby/OverDrive through the Libby/OverDrive app or online. The app is available for Android and iOS devices.
Kindle
Titles may be read using Kindle devices or with the Kindle app.

Description

A picture book celebrating all the reasons to love the rain! Flowers bloom in the garden. Umbrellas bloom on the streets. There are puddles for jumping and, later, a cozy home for hot chocolate and books.• The ultimate rainy day read!• Full of bright, eye-catching illustrations• From international acclaimed writer Kyo Maclear and printmaker Chris TurnhamThe air is full of waiting. The sky is full of breeze. The trees gust and billow. All before it rains.Rumble, rumble. Distant thunder. Rain is coming, rain is coming.No matter what kind of weather you prefer, Hello, Rain! is a great reminder of the natural beauty all around us.• Children's books for kids age 3–5• Great read aloud picture book• Ideal for nature lovers

More Details

Format
eBook, Kindle
Street Date
04/13/2021
Language
English
ISBN
9781452143415

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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 feel-good and upbeat, and they have the subjects "rainy days," "play," and "rain and rainfall."
These books have the genre "picture books for children"; and the subjects "rainy days," "play," and "alliteration."
Rainy days are celebrated in whimsical fashion in these picture books with upbeat (Sunny) and feel-good (Hello, Rain!) tones. Hello, Rain! centers on the way rain nurtures living things, while Sunny's spunky protagonist practices optimism on her way to school. -- Malia Jackson
With brightly colored illustrations and lyrical language, these feel-good picture books share the joy of a rainy day and give attention to the life that rainfall brings. Rain is contemplative; Hello, Rain! is playful. -- Natalie Harvey
These books have the genre "picture books for children"; and the subjects "rainy days," "play," and "rain and rainfall."
These books have the appeal factors sweet, and they have the subjects "rainy days," "play," and "rain and rainfall."
These books have the genre "picture books for children"; and the subjects "rainy days," "play," and "rain and rainfall."
Follow delighted children as they explore the outdoors on a rainy day in these sweet picture books. The bouncy rhymes (Rainy Days) and joyful wordplay (Hello, Rain!) make these stories excellent read-aloud choices. -- Natalie Harvey
These books have the appeal factors feel-good and upbeat, and they have the genres "picture books for children" and "storytime standouts"; and the subjects "rain and rainfall," "onomatopoeia," and "thunderstorms."
These books have the appeal factors feel-good, upbeat, and wordplay-filled, and they have the genre "picture books for children"; and the subjects "rainy days," "play," and "rain and rainfall."
With bright and cheerful children on the covers, these spring-time stories celebrate a rainy day. With a colorful but muted illustrations, readers discover how they can have fun and the ways rain can bring joy even on dreary days. -- Sarah Bean Thompson
In these poetic books, children observe the natural world as rain begins and a storm rolls in, first observing outside, then inside as the storm grows fiercer. Wind is about an actual hurricane, while Rain features a gentler storm. -- NoveList Contributor

Similar Authors From NoveList

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.
These authors' works have the appeal factors lyrical and spare, and they have the genre "canadian fiction"; the subject "nature"; and illustrations that are "delicate illustrations," "textured illustrations," and "fanciful illustrations."
These authors' works have the appeal factors moving, and they have the genre "canadian fiction"; the subjects "families," "friendship," and "family relationships"; and illustrations that are "minimally colored illustrations," "delicate illustrations," and "black-and-white illustrations."

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Grab some galoshes and raid the lost and found for umbrellas because readers will be enamored with inclement weather after reading this beautiful book. It begins with the "plink, plunk, plonk" of drops falling onto a yellow house, a young Asian girl's smiling face plastered to the front window, her short hair gathered into pert pigtails, her pup at her side. Together they get ready to go outside--yellow raincoats for both girl and dog, followed by rubber boots and a large multi-colored umbrella. Amid a jostling crowd, "umbrellas bloom" and the rain ("Deluge, downpour, / sprinkle, storm, / a drizzle, a mizzle.") collects into a large puddle into which the girl gleefully jumps. The story's language and illustrations are wonderfully matched, as both capture the dual wonders on display: that of nature and that felt by the girl. Created digitally, Turnham's artwork has the appearance of watercolors awash in muted summer tones--coral, plum, sky blue--and it zooms in on the little things that capture the girl's attention throughout her wanderings, from accentuated raindrops to a wriggling worm to the glistening green that comes after the rain. Maclear's playful use of alliteration, consonance, and onomatopoeia make this a joy to read aloud and a more realistic, but no less enchanting, companion to Beatrice Alemagna's On a Magical Do-Nothing Day (2017).

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

From distant thunder to clearing skies, a downpour offers plenty to see and do for the star of this story and a dog companion. Heading outside as "umbrellas bloom," the slicker-clad child gets happier the wetter the day becomes, stomping in puddles and letting go of a paper boat and two stick rafts: "Curbside waterfall./ Downhill swoosh./ Out of many drops--/ One./ Rushing./ River./ Let's launch the fleet!" The two behold the rain summoning living things ("an earthworm,/ a stick snail") and helping others grow ("hyacinth,/ foxglove"), then "crouch under a tree/ and whisper-talk" until lightning and cracks of thunder drive them to watch the storm from inside. Maclear (Story Boat) celebrates the unbounded joy of discovery in ordinary things, chronicling events with a poet's powers of observation: "a single drop of rain/ touches five times--/a branch,/ a leaf,/ an apple, a rock,/ a blade of grass--before reaching/ the ground." Digital, retro-style spreads by Turnham (National Parks of the USA) give the pages a memorable look with a palette of unexpected hues--muddy mauve alongside turquoise, yellow, and green. Together, the creators conjure a child who fully inhabits each present moment until the sun arrives again. Ages 3--5. (Apr.)

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Kirkus Book Review

A child and pet dog relish a rainy day. Child and pet stare out the window as clouds gather. Excitedly, as the rain goes "plink, plunk, plonk" on the rooftop, the child dons a raincoat and boots and grabs an umbrella. (Even the dog gets a rain jacket.) The pair delight in the sensory adventure that is play in the rain: They ponder words for rain, the creatures who seek it, and the growing things nourished by it; jump in puddles; launch paper boats near a "curbside waterfall"; and find a quiet spot under a tree to sit for "whisper-talk." When thunder and lightning fill the sky, they run inside to get warm and dry. In text that begs to be shared aloud, evocative figurative language ("the air is full of waiting" and "umbrellas bloom"), a heaping dose of onomatopoeia ("Crack! Flash!"), and delicious vocabulary (deluge, drizzle, and bursting) vividly animate the thrill of heading outside when "the sky is an adventure." The illustrations themselves burst with life, movement, and mirth. Cerulean (for the rain) and yellow (for raincoats) hues enchant. One especially pleasing spread gives readers an aerial view of flowers, fruits, and vegetables that benefit from the drink that is the cool, fresh rain. Afterward, the sun and even a rainbow dazzle: "Hello, Sun!" The child has rosy-cheeked pink skin and straight, black hair in pigtails. A joyous tribute to the wonders of a rainy day for the pluviophile in all of us. (Picture book. 3-7) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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

*Starred Review* Grab some galoshes and raid the lost and found for umbrellas because readers will be enamored with inclement weather after reading this beautiful book. It begins with the "plink, plunk, plonk" of drops falling onto a yellow house, a young Asian girl's smiling face plastered to the front window, her short hair gathered into pert pigtails, her pup at her side. Together they get ready to go outside—yellow raincoats for both girl and dog, followed by rubber boots and a large multi-colored umbrella. Amid a jostling crowd, "umbrellas bloom" and the rain ("Deluge, downpour, / sprinkle, storm, / a drizzle, a mizzle.") collects into a large puddle into which the girl gleefully jumps. The story's language and illustrations are wonderfully matched, as both capture the dual wonders on display: that of nature and that felt by the girl. Created digitally, Turnham's artwork has the appearance of watercolors awash in muted summer tones—coral, plum, sky blue—and it zooms in on the little things that capture the girl's attention throughout her wanderings, from accentuated raindrops to a wriggling worm to the glistening green that comes after the rain. Maclear's playful use of alliteration, consonance, and onomatopoeia make this a joy to read aloud and a more realistic, but no less enchanting, companion to Beatrice Alemagna's On a Magical Do-Nothing Day (2017). Preschool-Grade 1. Copyright 2021 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2021 Booklist Reviews.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

From distant thunder to clearing skies, a downpour offers plenty to see and do for the star of this story and a dog companion. Heading outside as "umbrellas bloom," the slicker-clad child gets happier the wetter the day becomes, stomping in puddles and letting go of a paper boat and two stick rafts: "Curbside waterfall./ Downhill swoosh./ Out of many drops—/ One./ Rushing./ River./ Let's launch the fleet!" The two behold the rain summoning living things ("an earthworm,/ a stick snail") and helping others grow ("hyacinth,/ foxglove"), then "crouch under a tree/ and whisper-talk" until lightning and cracks of thunder drive them to watch the storm from inside. Maclear (Story Boat) celebrates the unbounded joy of discovery in ordinary things, chronicling events with a poet's powers of observation: "a single drop of rain/ touches five times—/a branch,/ a leaf,/ an apple, a rock,/ a blade of grass—before reaching/ the ground." Digital, retro-style spreads by Turnham (National Parks of the USA) give the pages a memorable look with a palette of unexpected hues—muddy mauve alongside turquoise, yellow, and green. Together, the creators conjure a child who fully inhabits each present moment until the sun arrives again. Ages 3–5. (Apr.)

Copyright 2021 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2021 Publishers Weekly.
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Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Maclear, K., & Turnham, C. (2021). Hello, Rain! . Chronicle Books LLC.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Maclear, Kyo and Chris Turnham. 2021. Hello, Rain!. Chronicle Books LLC.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Maclear, Kyo and Chris Turnham. Hello, Rain! Chronicle Books LLC, 2021.

Harvard Citation (style guide)

Maclear, K. and Turnham, C. (2021). Hello, rain! Chronicle Books LLC.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Maclear, Kyo, and Chris Turnham. Hello, Rain! Chronicle Books LLC, 2021.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

Copy Details

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Libby110

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