My Life on the Mountain
by Marion Brand
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Pub Date Feb 11 2025 | Archive Date Jan 28 2025
Publisher Spotlight | Helvetiq
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Description
An illustrated look at the real experiences of running an alpine dairy farm, from early morning to late at night. Discover mountain life with a shepherdess!
Author and illustrator Marion Brand spent a long summer tending goats and cows on a mountain farm. In comic book style, she draws on her experiences and those of another shepherdess, Flavie, to showcase all the tasks mountain herders do each day—milking, driving tractors, cutting wood, making cheese, and much more!
Up before the sun, the shepherdess is always busy: caring for the animals, working at her computer, and delivering her goods to town. Her life is full and the day is never long enough to do it all. And every day, it starts all over again!
This book demystifies mountain farm work while celebrating a hard-working woman. Marion’s striking illustrations will spark the imaginations of children who love animals and the outdoors. The final pages of the book share different stories of herders around the world.
Advance Praise
Publishers Weekly (10/28/2024):
Through simple lined drawings and step-by-step text, Brand paints an idyllic picture of a goat herder's jam-packed life. The day begins with an alarm that goes off before sunrise. After building a morning fire, a red-haired, pink-skinned figure collects goats from the mountainside for milking, celebrating the collection of 38 pints of fluid. Cheese-making comes next, then a noontime meal and nap preps the busy protagonist for a trip to deliver their product in the village before heading back home for chores. At day's end, "there's still a bit of paperwork to be done," but bed beckons. The artwork's clean lines and contemporary styling pairs well with a palette of periwinkles and pinks for an infographic-like effect in this straightforward portrait of a herder's livelihood that's captured pictorially and via onomatopoeia. Extensive back matter concludes. Ages 5-8. (Feb.)Copyright 2024 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.
Kirkus Reviews (12/01/2024):
A solitary shepherdess in the Alps tends her herd of goats. Brand's flat, modern style has a cartoonish flair akin to that of Byron Barton, with thick, black outlines and bold colors. First-person text translated from French matches the visual narrative's simplicity and offers straightforward narration detailing how the light-skinned protagonist cares for her animals and turns their milk into cheese to sell in a nearby village. Accompanied by her dog, she goes into the mountains early in the morning to bring the goats to the milking barn, where she collects 38 pints, enough, with the prior day's milk, to make a wheel of cheese. Slapstick humor aids the storytelling when the wheel rolls away ("Boing!"), but the intrepid shepherdess catches it, then cleans it and brings it to a shop. Subsequent scenes show her engaged in various tasks necessary to keep her farm running--hauling hay, cutting wood, bottle-feeding a kid. She then prepares for bed before waking to start over again the next day. In the robust backmatter, Brand shares more about herding, first with a Q&A with the narrator (now identified as "Flavie") and then with expository text about alpine herds, milk and milk products, other herding animals, and structures people use for shelter when they're herding animals. Informative and downright wholesome.(Informational picture book. 2-5) COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Children's Fiction