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See you someday soon  Cover Image Book Book

See you someday soon

Miller, Pat Zietlow (author.). Lee, Suzy, 1974- (illustrator.).

Summary: A child imagines ways to connect with their grandmother who lives far way.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781250221100
  • Physical Description: print
    regular print
    42 unnumbered pages : colour illustrations ; 26 cm
  • Edition: First edition.
  • Publisher: New York : Roaring Brook Press, 2022.
Subject: Grandmothers -- Juvenile fiction
Grandparent and child -- Juvenile fiction
Toy and movable books -- Juvenile literature

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at University College of the North Libraries.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
The Pas Campus Library PZ 7 .M63224 S44 2022 (Text) 58500000809558 UCNPicture Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2022 August #1
    How do Grandma and her grandchild "see" each other when they are far apart? This book uses clever cutouts to show how this amazing feat can be accomplished. The child imagines hopping on a rocket, strapping on a jet pack, or catapulting though the sky. But school, soccer, parents' jobs, and money produce obstacles. How about sending letters and pictures, or phone calls? Better yet is a computer screen! Cutouts reveal the child's new glasses, polka-dot socks, and bottle cap collection, as well as grandma's room and flowers, and even the cat. But hugging is much better in person—the final window opens to show grandma and child together in the same happy place. Full-page illustrations in bright colors are overlaid with black-lined drawings of both characters' busy activities. The simple text will resonant with any child missing a loved one far away. The fun in peeking through the holes and then turning the page to reveal the picture will keep kids guessing what's next. Preschool-Grade 2. Copyright 2022 Booklist Reviews.
  • Horn Book Guide Reviews : Horn Book Guide Reviews 2022 Fall
    Someday soon, I'll see you. Even though you are there. And I am here. So very far apart. I want to see you now, of course. Right this minute. In a childlike first-person text, a young person describes to a loved one the feeling of missing her and yearning for a reunion, touching on imaginative ways of doing so (rocket ships, jetpacks) along with real-life solutions (sending letters back and forth, video chatting). Lee's warmhearted illustrations -- coupled with the book's ingenious design -- provide terrific enhancement to the story line. Frequent die-cuts (used to show how the characters could be physically closer together through the pages); variations in background colors; different-size pages; and changes in font, style, size, and text placement help pace the events and offer literal windows into the characters' feelings of impatience, frustration, longing, and love. One particularly timely -- and humorous -- image shows the characters not-quite-centered on their respective computer screens. The end of the book brings unadulterated joy in the form of a tightly held, sunshine-y embrace. While this reassuring picture book is particularly apt for the COVID-19 era, it will be welcomed by anyone suffering separation and seeking comfort. Copyright 2023 Horn Book Guide Reviews.
  • Horn Book Magazine Reviews : Horn Book Magazine Reviews 2022 #4
    "Someday soon, I'll see you. Even though you are there. And I am here. So very far apart. I want to see you now, of course. Right this minute." In a childlike first-person text, a young person describes to a loved one the feeling of missing her and yearning for a reunion, touching on imaginative ways of doing so (rocket ships, jetpacks) along with real-life solutions (sending letters back and forth, video chatting). Lee's warmhearted illustrations -- coupled with the book's ingenious design -- provide terrific enhancement to the story line. Frequent die-cuts ("used to show how the characters could be physically closer together through the pages"); variations in background colors; different-size pages; and changes in font, style, size, and text placement help pace the events and offer literal windows into the characters' feelings of impatience, frustration, longing, and love. One particularly timely -- and humorous -- image shows the characters not-quite-centered on their respective computer screens. The end of the book brings unadulterated joy in the form of a tightly held, sunshine-y embrace. While this reassuring picture book is particularly apt for the COVID-19 era, it will be welcomed by anyone suffering separation and seeking comfort. Elissa Gershowitz July/August 2022 p.95 Copyright 2022 Horn Book Magazine Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2022 May #1
    A touching depiction of love across the miles between a grandmother and a grandchild. Miller's first-person text shares the voice of a child longing for their grandmother, who lives far away. Since they don't know when they'll see each other again, they keep in touch via phone calls, video chats, and letters, with the child imagining playful, fantastical ways they might see each other "someday soon." The child even imagines being folded up in an envelope, Ã la Flat Stanley, to be sent in the mail to their grandmother. The titular refrain is repeated throughout the book, voicing a steady hope despite the uncertain timing of a resolution. Lee's illustrations match the childlike tone of the text, adopting a sketchy, loose, cartoonlike aesthetic, and while drawings are largely made up of figures rendered in black, changing background colors, intraiconic text indicating dialogue, and highlights of color add expressive dimension and visual interest. An added die-cut element enhances the art's play with the concept of seeing someone by offering glimpses of characters' faces between pages. A satisfying resolution arrives to close the book, offering solace to those who have endured long separations from loved ones due to the pandemic and also to anyone whose loved ones live far away. Characters' skin tones vary depending on the color of the page. (This book was reviewed digitally.) Pick up this title someday soon. (Picture book. 2-6) Copyright Kirkus 2022 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2022 May #5

    A child's creative musings about ways to stay connected with a long-distance grandparent propel this contemporary narrative, which cleverly uses die-cuts to provide a peek-a-boo effect. "Maybe I'll mail myself to you," the child proposes, peering through an envelope's opening from the next page, before humorously continuing to riff: "I'd have to flatten myself like a pancake. Or twist up like a pretzel." Working mostly with pencil, crayon, and watercolor, Lee's stylish drawings add humor and whimsy, showing, for example, the black-haired outlines of child and grandparent—whose skin tones change with the shifting bold-colored backgrounds—trying to video-chat without quite fully centering themselves on the computer screen. The repeated refrain "see you someday soon" links the various modes of communication on display until the duo turn "soon" into something even sooner in this playful spin on modern grandparent-child relationships. Ages 3–6. (June)

    Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly.
  • SLJ Express Reviews : SLJ Express Reviews

    PreS-Gr 2—There have been a spate of long-distance grandparent books this year, but it will be hard to find one more visually charming than this one. With die-cut holes, and constant patter of reassuring monologue, the young narrator explains why he or she cannot be with the grandmother now but how "See you someday soon" are watch words. Until the end of the book, they are never occupying the same space but never more than a few pages and a peephole away. It's not just space and distance that separate them, but time—the parents have jobs and a lot going on, and the grandparent or relative that is so far away has a life, too, of cats, and flowers, procured or maybe gardened, and making dinner. The pacing of the journey—there is a hug at the end—is so quiet and steady, like the beating of a hopeful heart about to get its dearest wish. This book will win over readers at both ends of the age range with the promise of the title and the narrator's clear-eyed belief that "soon" is not a movable post. This will happen. VERDICT This is a title sturdy enough for sharing, and soothing for all who live far from loved ones, as well as a handbook for the myriad ways to stay in touch before and after those precious visits.—Kimberly Olson Fakih

    Copyright 2022 SLJExpress.
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