![]() ![]() ![]() At this overwhelming moment, Wemberly meets another girl mouse, Jewel, who turns out to be a kindred spirit (she even carries her own worn doll). For instance, as he lists Wemberly's worries, ""Big things"" heads the list, paired with a vignette of the heroine checking on her parents in the middle of the night with a flashlight, ""I wanted to make sure you were still here."" He later shows how Wemberly's anxieties peak at the start of nursery school with huge text that dwarfs tiny illustrations. Henkes adroitly juggles the main narrative, hand-lettered asides and watercolor-and-ink imagery of the young pessimist and her supportive parents each element contributes a different strength. Her security blanket, a rabbit doll named Petal (whose spot over the left eye matches her own), rarely leaves her grip. Too high,"" while sitting on a park bench watching the other mice play. ""At the playground, Wemberly worried about/ the chains on the swings,/ and the bolts on the slide,/ and the bars on the jungle gym."" She tells her father, ""Too rusty. Wemberly, a shy white mouse with gray spots, always feels nervous whether at home or away. ![]() Henkes (Lilly's Purple Plastic Purse) introduces another wonderfully appealing child-mouse with a stubborn habit: worrying. ![]()
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