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Summary
Summary
The sixth installment of Karma Wilson's award-winning, New York Times bestselling series about a Bear and his forest friends.
Autumn has come to the woods, and Bear doesn't feel well. He sniffles and sneezes. He cannot sleep. He aches all over. Worst of all, he's feeling too poorly to play with his friends.
How Bear's good friends take care of him with herbal tea and lullabies until he begins to FEEL BETTER is the heart of this loving story that will be familiar to any little one who has ever had the sniffles.
Author Notes
Karma Wilson was an only child who grew up in Idaho and developed a love of reading at an early age. She was reading a novel a day by the age of eleven. Karma never considered a writing career until she and her husband used a tax refund to buy a computer. Determined to make the machine pay for itself, Karma learned to type and decided to try her hand at writing. After countless rejections, Bear Snores On was released in 2002 and made it on both The New York Times and Publishers Weekly bestseller lists for children's books. Since then, she has had more than 30 other books accepted for publication. Her title Bear Says Thanks made The New York Times Best Seller List for 2012.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (4)
School Library Journal Review
PreS-Gr 2-It is a typical autumn day, with blowing leaves and golden trees. But Bear doesn't feel well. He has a cold, and is feeling alone in his cave, snuffling and sneezing. Then all of his friends come to try and help him feel better. They light a fire, fluff his blanket, and make him some broth and tea, tending him lovingly. The rhyming text and oft-repeated refrain ("Bear feels sick") make this book irresistible when read aloud. Chapman's illustrations are warm and cozy. Bear is big and cuddly. His friends are shown doing small things to help him get better, including making drawings and singing him to sleep. The paintings glow with the light of the fire and the heat of the cave. What more could anyone ask when under the weather than a snug house and plenty of TLC?-Susan E. Murray, Glendale Public Library, AZ (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
Following in the footsteps of its bestselling predecessors, Bear Feels Sick by Karma Wilson, illus. by Jane Chapman, brings back Bear and company. When Bear comes down with a nasty cold, his friends work hard to make him feel better, though their roles soon reverse. (S&S/McElderry, $16.99 40p ages 3-7 ISBN 9780-689-85985-4; Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Kirkus Review
This gentle rhyming tale about being sick and taking care of friends is sure to cheer up even the sniffliest of small patients. It's a beautiful autumn day, but Bear is feeling sick and cannot play with his friends. Instead of leaving him to recuperate alone, they tenderly try to make him feel better. Hare snuggles a blanket around him and mouse gives him a hug, while badger gets some water so that gopher can cook some broth and mole can put a cool cloth on his forehead. When this does not cure him, the birds fly off to get some leaves for tea, but Bear "still feels sick." Lullabies finally coax him off to sleep, and when he awakens, all their efforts have paid off. Unfortunately, now his friends are feeling sick, and bear unflinchingly takes up the mantle of caregiver. Chapman's acrylic illustrations are as delightful as ever, depicting an adorable cast of forest animals in warm earth tones. The friends' love for one another is more than evident from their facial expressions and tender actions. This is a sure soother for anyone home sick in bed. (Picture book. 3-7) Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
When Bear feels achy with a stuffed-up nose, his friends come to his rescue with plenty of TLC. They tend him with a cool cloth, hot broth, and herbal tea, but nothing seems to work. Finally, their lullabies put him to sleep, and he awakens feeling like new. His friends, however, are now sick, but he assures them, You took care of me . . . now. I'll take care of you. With the characteristic gentle humor of Wilson and Chapman's earlier Bear books, the jaunty rhymed narrative invites children to chime in on the still feels sick refrain. The large, appealing autumnal illustrations match the lively tone and make this an excellent choice for fall and flu-season story times.--Perkins, Linda Copyright 2007 Booklist