Hopper's Treetop Adventure ANNOTATION
While searching for nuts in the forest, Hopper the hare meets a friendly squirrel and climbs up into his tree to spend time with him.
FROM THE PUBLISHER
While searching for nuts in the forest, Hopper the hare meets a friendly squirrel and climbs up into his tree to spend time with him.
FROM THE CRITICS
Children's Literature - Dr. Judy Rowen
Hopper is a little hare who craves adventure and a change in diet, so he runs off to the forest to look for hazelnuts. A possessive squirrel tries to chase him off, but Hopper offers to help him dig for hidden nuts, and the two become friends. Hopper even follows the squirrel up into the trees, belying the dictum that rabbits don't climb trees. Pfister's trademark watercolors adorn the story.
School Library Journal
PreS-Gr 2One spring morning Hopper sets out to look for hazelnuts. His mother warns that he won't find any nuts in spring and that hares don't eat nuts because they can't climb trees. Hopper proves that she is wrong on both counts. After he helps a young squirrel find the nuts that had been buried in the fall, the squirrel shows the hare how to climb a tree. There they enjoy the nuts in safety, until Hopper, not knowing how to get back down, is rescued by a friendly stag. This gentle story of helping one another and fulfilling goals is illustrated with warm, misty watercolors in soft pastels.Sally R. Dow, Ossining Public Library, NY
Kirkus Reviews
A modest adventure involving an ambitious bunny, a tall tree, and some hazelnuts. One fine morning, Hopper informs his mother that he's heading for the woods to snack on hazelnuts. She gently reminds him that nuts aren't found in spring, and that hares don't usually eat nuts"I suppose it's because we can't climb trees." Hopper pads off to the woods anyway, where he meets a squirrel. Hopper helps the squirrel locate his lost nut horde, and the squirrel shows Hopper how to get up into a tree where they can eat the nuts in peace. Getting down is another matter, but with the help of a friendly woodpecker and an accommodating stag, Hopper makes it back home with a hazelnut surprise for his mother, and a story about climbing trees as well: "I don't think I'll do it again. It was too scary." That comes as a bit of a surprise, after all the fun he has had. Despite the overprotective edge, Pfister's peaceable kingdom is as tidy and secure as ever, a safe haven to which children can turn when the everyday world gets too confusing. The soft watercolors wash the whole event with angelic light.