Bound To Stay Bound

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 Ostrich and Lark
 Author: Nelson, Marilyn R.

 Publisher:  Boyds Mills Press (2012)

 Classification: Easy
 Physical Description: [32] p., col. ill., 27 cm.

 BTSB No: 670431 ISBN: 9781590787021
 Ages: 4-8 Grades: K-3

 Subjects:
 Birds
 Friendship
 Children's poetry

Price: $6.50

Summary:
Artists in western Botswana help create a picture book that celebrates the unlikely friendship of an ostrich and a lark.

Accelerated Reader Information:
   Interest Level: LG
   Reading Level: 5.20
   Points: .5   Quiz: 153945

Common Core Standards 
   Grade K → Reading → RL Literature → K.RL Key Ideas & Details
   Grade K → Reading → RL Literature → K.RL Craft & Structure
   Grade K → Reading → RL Literature → K.RL Integration of Knowledge & Ideas
   Grade 1 → Reading → RL Reading Literature → 1.RL Key Ideas & Details
   Grade 1 → Reading → RL Reading Literature → 1.RL Integration of Knowledge & Ideas
   Grade 1 → Reading → RL Reading Literature → 1.RL Range of Reading & Level of Text Complexity
   Grade 2 → Reading → RL Reading Literature → 2.RL Key Ideas & Details
   Grade 2 → Reading → RL Reading Literature → 2.RL Range of Reading & Level of Text Complexity
   Grade 2 → Reading → CCR College & Career Readiness Anchor Standards fo
   Grade 3 → Reading → RL Literature → 3.RL Key Ideas & Details
   Grade 3 → Reading → RL Literature → 3.RL Integration & Knowledge of Ideas

Reviews:
   Kirkus Reviews (08/15/12)
   School Library Journal (00/09/12)
   Booklist (12/01/12)

Full Text Reviews:

Booklist - 12/01/2012 On a recent visit to Botswana, award-winning poet Nelson met the San artists, whose ancestors, the first peoples of southern Africa, created rock paintings that date back thousands of years. Here six contemporary San artists illustrate Nelson’s original story with bright oil paint and collage images that show birds Ostrich and Lark in a hot country where “all day the sun glared out of cloudless blue.” Lark sings and Canary, Hornbill, and Mousebird, “the fancy-dressed suitors of the veld,” warble their “rain-shower jazz.” Silent Ostrich, though, is a large, quiet presence in every double-page spread, where he is shown dreaming of flying and singing. At last, Ostrich finds his voice as a rainstorm ends a drought—a “dusty monster of thirst.” Caught by the glowing art, children will want to explore the issues discussed in an introductory note about how the first hunter-gatherer peoples have been displaced by the farms and fences that have taken over their land and water. - Copyright 2012 Booklist.

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