Description
★"Scenes are evocative and provide endless opportunities for discussion with young children. This book is ideal for all libraries as a non-threatening and productive story that can give hope to children who feel like Olivia."--SLJ, starred review
The world is a really big place for little kids.
When Olivia starts to feel overwhelmed by her big feelings, she sprouts vines. They are thorny and twisty and make it impossible for Olivia to do the things she loves to do, like ride her bike or play with her friends. Plus, no one wants to come near a giant ball of thorns. Luckily, Olivia has a very special teacher. Someone who sees past the prickly and the pokey to the upset little girl and helps Olivia learn to manage the vines.
This quirky picture book is the perfect introduction to the idea of anxiety and those big feelings that seem impossible to manage. Olivia's teacher provides some tricks to help manage the feelings, and a special message at the end of the story encourages young readers to think productively about their own anxieties.
About the Author
Nepveu-Villeneuve, Maude: -
Maude Nepveu-Villeneuve is an editor and professor of literature at CEGEP in Old Montreal. Between writing projects and lesson prep, Maude dances ballet and reads to her daughters. This is her first picture book for children. She lives in Montreal.
Dumais, Sandra: -Originally from Toronto, Sandra Dumais uses a combination of inks, watercolors and markers to create rich and colorful images. Inspired by everyday whimsy and her family, Sandra is known for creating maps that tell a story (although, she warns you shouldn't use them to get around) and is currently working on book projects for which she is both author and illustrator. She lives in Montreal.
Simard, Charles: -Charles Simard is a Québécois editor and translator from Tiohtià꞉ke / Montréal. He works as poetry, fiction, and nonfiction editor for Talonbooks in Vancouver on Coast Salish Territory. His published work includes the essay Littérature, analyse et forme: Herbert, Tolkien, Borges, Eco (EUE, 2010) and a number of translations for Orca Book Publishers, including Elise Gravel's The Wrench and Myriam Daguzan Bernier's dictionary of sexuality, Naked!. As a lexicographer, he has collaborated on the making of the popular linguistic suite Antidote in its bilingual editions. He holds a PhD in literature from Université de Montréal and was a postdoctoral fellow at the City University of New York's Graduate Center.
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