On his first trip into the world, a baby baboon meets a very slow turtle and concludes that the world is slow. But then, as his mother takes him farther afield, he sees much he watches a hungry crocodile, a thundering herd of elephants, a swift gazelle, a rhinoceros. He feels the heat of a fire, the softness of grass, the warmth of the sun. Throughout the day, everything he experiences expands his understanding, and when night falls, he has seen with his own eyes that the world is a big and varied place. With its simple, rhythmic text and bold, impressionistic jungle pictures, Baboon is a book to share with children as they explore their own new worlds.
Kate Banks has written many books for children, among them Max’s Words, And If the Moon Could Talk, winner of the Boston Globe–Horn Book Award, and The Night Worker, winner of the Charlotte Zolotow Award. She grew up in Maine, where she and her two sisters and brother spent a lot of time outdoors, and where Banks developed an early love of reading. “I especially liked picture books,” she says, “and the way in which words and illustrations could create a whole new world in which sometimes real and other times magical and unexpected things could happen.” Banks attended Wellesley College and received her masters in history at Columbia University. She lived in Rome for eight years but now lives in the South of France with her husband and two sons, Peter Anton and Maximilian.
The book tells the first journey baby baboon meets the world with his mother. Baboon is curious, everything he sees is new and fresh. With more and more he sees, his view of the world broadened, and he gradually knows that the world is a big and varied place. I especially like the impressionistic style illustration: it is just like see from the baby baboon's eyes, the world is an impression, vague, but real.
This book would be great to use to help children understand generalizations. A baboon just came into the world and his mother is showing him around. With everything he sees, he makes a generalization about the world.
The world is a big and sometimes confusing place for all children, human and animal alike. In this gentle story, a baby baboon explores and learns about his world of the African plains.
This is a good book to read to students to help them expand their understanding of the world. They could take apart the meanings that the baboon deiscovers in the book. This can relate to a social studies lesson about the world. Students can learn their place in the world and how they can help.
This can be an inspirational book to write poetry. Each line could be "The world is..." and the next line short explain how it is. The students can use the book as a model on how to make a poem. I would also model it since to took an idea from this book.
Nice, if not terribly memorable. I'm fond of Kate Banks and I love the idea of the little baboon exploring his immediate world while staying within arms' reach of his mother, who provides a contextually wise and warm explanation for everything he (she?) sees. The illustrations seem a bit lazy, but overall it's a sweet read.
This is the stor of an infant baboon that is just learning the ways of the world on a tour with her mother. Like other books that Kate Banks has written, this is a soothing reassuring tale about building understanding through experience and a mother's reassurance that the world is wonderful place if you only know to proceed with caution.
This is a great book to read to a small child who is learning how big the world can be. There are so many different parts to the world, and it is important to learn how they all work together. The pictures in this book are lovely, and the message it carries spurs dialogic reading for children and their caregivers.
I love this book. The little baboon views the world on the back of his mother. He describe what the world is like through his eyes. A great book to celebrate the wonders of the world.
We follow baboon and his mother through their habitat, learning animal names along the way. Baboon is beginning to understand the vast size of his world. Illustrations are muted and dark - too dark.