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Heat Wave

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The mercury is climbing in Lumberville, and the folks are doing everything they can to keep cool. Officer McGinnis spends the day in a cold bath, Lottie Mims does her housework in her bathing suit, and Abigail and Ralphie Blue sell ice cubes. When the temperature refuses to relent, the entire community seeks solace by the river—where everyone dreams of cool relief.

A cast of quirky characters and lots of playful details from two celebrated picture-book talents make this heat wave look like fun!

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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 9, 2007
      From the opening lines (“Sun sizzled. Hair frizzled”), Spinelli (Summerhouse Time
      ) jauntily establishes the theme for this tale of one sweltering week in the town of Lumberville, long before the advent of air conditioners. Beginning on a blistering Monday, the day-by-day chronicle reveals how residents cope. Abigail Blue and her brother Ralphie open a lemonade stand, but two days later “forgot about the lemonade and just sold ice.” Lottie Mims takes four cold showers one day and on the next “wore her bathing suit to clean house.” Caldecott Honor artist Lewin’s (Click, Clack, Moo
      ) amusing assemblage of brush, ink and watercolor images portray the resourceful ways the townsfolk try to beat the heat. On Saturday night, “everyone—whether in a bed or on a rooftop or on a fire escape or in a tent or near the river—everyone... had the exact same dream.” A spread depicting that dream rounds up playful portraits of the smiling citizens frolicking in the rain. A power outage may be the closest modern readers come to a similar experience, but they (and nostalgic parents) should nonetheless appreciate this good-natured tribute to summer at its hottest. Ages 3-7.

    • School Library Journal

      Starred review from June 1, 2007
      K-Gr 3 -Before stores, businesses, and homes had air conditioners, the residents of Lumberville had to get creative during a heat wave. The "sun sizzled. Hair frizzled" as sweltering day after day began. Townspeople, kids, and dogs try a variety of ways to cool down and finally all camp out on the riverbank dreaming of a break in the weather. Stark white pages provide the perfect backdrop for fresh, vivid watercolor cartoons, with the final page displaying splashes of refreshing blue raindrops. While the story is simple and straightforward, the sun-drenched illustrations provide a spirited and evocative look back in time.Judy Chichinski, Skyline Elementary School, Tacoma, WA

      Copyright 2007 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • The Horn Book

      November 1, 2007
      It's long before the days of air conditioning, and a handful of Lumberville residents -- Pastor Denkins; Abigail Blue and her little brother, Ralphie; and others -- must find ways to beat the heat during one punishing summer week. Take Lottie Mims: on Wednesday, she "wore her bathing suit to clean house"; on Thursday, she "took a nap with cold tea bags on her eyes." The increasingly desperate cast members behave in character-defying ways ("Officer McGinnis soaked all afternoon in a bubble bath") that are both surprising and amusing. Plotless though it is, Heat Wave gathers momentum as the temperature rises, and it climaxes with an impromptu late-night community get-together by the river. Not long after the mayor hands out "popsicles and political flyers," everyone falls asleep somewhere or another but dreams the same glorious dream: it rains. Lewin, using ink and watercolors dominated by blues, purples, and oranges, owns the blisteringly muggy setting, but she outdoes herself in the final spread, in which what look like actual water droplets splatter her illustrations of dancing Lumbervillians.

      (Copyright 2007 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:2.9
  • Lexile® Measure:610
  • Interest Level:K-3(LG)
  • Text Difficulty:0-2

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