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Kaia and the Bees

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The author of Those Shoes and an award-winning illustrator team up for the story of a girl who tries to overcome her fear of bees to see how amazing they are.
Kaia is the brave type. Like hottest-hot-pepper brave. But there is one thing that scares her: BEES! And right now, thousands of bees live on her roof because Kaia's dad is a beekeeper. Her dad says that the world needs bees and that's why they are beekeepers. But only he goes on the roof, not Kaia — unless she can find a way to be the brave girl she always says she is. Against a sunny city setting, author Maribeth Boelts and illustrator Angela Dominguez depict Kaia's small courageous steps — and her tiny insect neighbors — with great empathy and charm. Buzzing with storytime potential, Kaia and the Bees is an honest and relatable tale about bravery and compassion, as well as the importance of bees to our world.

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  • Reviews

    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2020
      A young beekeeper goes from reluctance to enthusiasm with some coaching from Dad. Kaia's brave about almost everything--except for bees. This is a problem, because Kaia's dad keeps two hives on the roof of their apartment building. Dad drones on and on about the importance of bees to the foods Kaia loves, but that doesn't make Kaia want to go near them. However, Kaia talks a big beekeeping game with the building's other kids--only to be found out when a bee landing triggers a public display of fear. Resolved to walk the beekeeping walk, a suited-up Kaia ascends with Dad to the roof, where up-close examination of a frame of bees softens the fear--until Kaia unwisely takes off a glove and is stung. The bee boycott resumes, till two bees accidentally enter the apartment on honey-harvest day, and Kaia bravely opens the window to let them out. Beekeeper Boelts infuses her narrative with both appropriate vocabulary and empathy. Narrator Kaia realistically articulates ambivalence: On the one hand, working the bees makes Kaia feel "electric"; on the other, bee stings hurt! For the most part Dominguez accurately depicts apiary equipment and practices in her friendly cartoons, and she peoples the story with a diverse cast not typically seen in kids' books about beekeeping. Kaia is biracial, with a black dad and white mom. Could be just the ticket for turning bee-phobes into beekeepers. (Picture book. 4-8)

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2020
      Preschool-G While Kaia boasts that she's brave, even furry-spider-in-the-basement brave, she is afraid of bees. Though her father reads about bees, talks about them, and keeps hives on their apartment building's roof, Kaia screams when a bee lands on her arm. Determined to overcome her fear, she suits up as a beekeeper and helps Dad locate the queen bee in a hive. When Kaia is stung, it's a setback. Still, when it's time to harvest the honey, she helps in the kitchen. And when two bees find their way indoors, she lifts the window to let them escape and waves goodbye. Now she's ready to brave the hives again. The colored-pencil illustrations, digitally enhanced, portray a biracial family in a friendly urban neighborhood and highlight Kaia's feelings. Kids will relate to Kaia's fear and her determination to be brave. Although she understands bees' importance in the environment and knows that she has her father's support, she finds courage only when she begins to consider the bees' viewpoint. An introduction to bees emerges through the natural-sounding dialogue in this expressive picture book.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2020, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2020
      Kaia knows that she should appreciate bees, and she would if she weren't so scared of them. It doesn't help that her apiarist father cares for two hives on the roof of their apartment building. Wanting to appear brave, Kaia brags to other kids as though she were the building's beekeeper until an actual passing bee lands on her arm, sending her into a state of panic--and exposing her to her peers: "'You're a liar!' Marcella says." This embarrassing situation jumpstarts Kaia's courage, and she asks her dad to let her help with the bees. A subsequent sting and Kaia's feelings about it drive home the points that being brave is hard work and that overcoming a very deep fear takes time. Warm mixed-media cartoon illustrations depict a loving (biracial) family in a cozy urban home where greenery flourishes both inside and out. Bold outlines convey Kaia's large emotions, while the narrative intersperses basic facts about the lives and work of honeybees. Though Kaia's bee sting was scary but not, for her, life-threatening, a note on the copyright page reminds people to "seek immediate emergency treatment if unusual or severe symptoms develop."

      (Copyright 2020 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      May 1, 2020
      Kaia knows that she should appreciate bees, and she would if she weren't so scared of them. It doesn't help that her apiarist father cares for two hives on the roof of their apartment building. Wanting to appear brave, Kaia brags to other kids as though she were the building's beekeeper until an actual passing bee lands on her arm, sending her into a state of panic-and exposing her to her peers: "'You're a liar!' Marcella says." This embarrassing situation jumpstarts Kaia's courage, and she asks her dad to let her help with the bees. A subsequent sting and Kaia's feelings about it drive home the points that being brave is hard work and that overcoming a very deep fear takes time. Warm mixed-media cartoon illustrations depict a loving (biracial) family in a cozy urban home where greenery flourishes both inside and out. Bold outlines convey Kaia's large emotions, while the narrative intersperses basic facts about the lives and work of honeybees. Though Kaia's bee sting was scary but not, for her, life-threatening, a note on the copyright page reminds people to "seek immediate emergency treatment if unusual or severe symptoms develop." Julie Roach

      (Copyright 2020 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • OverDrive Read

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:2.7
  • Interest Level:K-3(LG)
  • Text Difficulty:0-2

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