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K-3
Long's poignant picture book about a school bus is a meditation on the passage of time while finding purpose in all seasons of life, in the tradition of Virginia Lee Burton. "There was once a bright yellow bus who spent her days driving" passengers (first school children, then elderly people) "from one important place to another. And they filled her with joy." Eventually abandoned under a bridge, the bus becomes a resting spot for unhoused persons. One morning she's towed away and left in a field near a river, where the bus becomes a playground for a herd of goats. When the river floods the valley, fish take up residence. The striking grayscale graphite- and charcoal-pencil illustrations (with "charcoal dust...scratched out with X-Acto blades and smudged with Q-tips") feature color, done with acrylic paint, occasionally; the school-bus yellow of the protagonist is all the more eye-catching for it. Bird's-eye views alternating with partial closeups help steer viewers' emotions along with the narrative in witnessing and understanding the beauty of service to others. The book concludes with the story of the abandoned school bus that sparked Long's imagination, along with his techniques for creating a 3D paper mini-town in which to place the bus as a model for his illustrations.
Reviewer: Christina Dorr
| Horn Book Magazine Issue:
July, 2024