What Is A River?

What Is A River?

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Written and illustrated by Monika Vaicenavičiene


★A Washington Post Best Children’s Book of 2021★

★A Marginalian (formerly Brain Pickings) Best Children’s Book of 2021★

 ★ Shortlisted for the 2023 Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis (German Childrenʼs Literature Award)  ★ 


What is a river? It’s water, the source of life. It’s also a journey, visiting mountains, cities, and oceans. It’s a home; it’s shelter. It’s energy, giving away its force to humans for power and industry. It’s a meeting place; a memory; a place to wash, to find food, to dream; it’s a word. Such is a river.

As informative as it is lyrical, this is a visually stunning work of narrative nonfiction. Spanning science, history, geography, and myth, What Is A River? leads its readers to look at the natural world with attention, from a perspective infused with wonder, intimacy, and love.

ISBN: 978-1-59270-279-4

11” (W) x 11” (H) • 48 pages • HCJ

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AWARDS AND REVIEWS

★A Washington Post Best Children’s Book of 2021★ “This beautiful book, originally published in Sweden, celebrates all the ways rivers work, including as refreshment, as a home for animals and as a source of energy. Along with essential facts about nature, the author-illustrator delves into the historical and emotional connections shaped by these waterways.” —Washington Post

★A Marginalian (formerly Brain Pickings) Loveliest Children’s Book of 2021★ "What Is a River? [is] part prose poem and part encyclopedia, exploring the many things a river is and can be, ecologically and existentially... The narrative weaves in the encyclopedic—geology and history, curious statistics about famous rivers—but fact and feeling remain entwined in the poetic." —Maria Popova, Brain Pickings

“The curious little girl narrator and her grandmother while away time at a riverbank in Vaicenavičienė’s dreamy look at rivers and their significance to the world, in this picture book for older readers translated from Swedish. Grandma embroiders a tablecloth, and the girl collects flowers, when she asks, “What is a river?” The answers, one per double-page spread, explain many aspects of rivers, not only in the context of their features but also in a way that emphasizes our interconnectedness with nature. A river is a thread connecting people and places, says Grandma; a journey, a home, and much more. Each minilesson explains facts about rivers—for example, how deltas are created, which animals are nourished by the waterways, and how ancient Greeks thought that the world was encircled by one great river. These facts are beautifully illustrated and complemented by multimedia paintings and drawings, rendered in plenty of exquisite blues, of people, animals, plants, and more that sustain and are sustained by rivers. A book that can create a bedtime reverie and be used for nature study is a lovely find.” —STARRED REVIEW, Booklist

“The book is reminiscent of an artist’s diary, with type that has a handwritten feel and artwork that is fully fleshed out interspersed with simple pencil sketches. The beautiful, softly colored illustrations offer plenty of details and asides that invite readers to further explore the pages. Strategically placed questions offer even more opportunities for readers to get immersed in the book—and to come away with a better understanding of the complexity and importance of a river in our shared world. Readers may never look at a river the same way again.” ―STARRED REVIEW, Kirkus Reviews

“Pencil and mixed-media vignettes have a childlike feel that is elaborated in intricate detail. Readers come away with a sense of the wealth and strength of rivers through Vaicenavičienė’s story, which twists and wanders like a river itself.” ―Publishers Weekly

“The story shifts from narrative to expository as we learn myriad wonders and facts about rivers: from the journeys they take, the shelter they provide for their inhabitants, the refreshment they offer to their people, to the history and connections they weave. Each two-page spread delves into a new concept wrapped in award-winning illustrations that draw the reader in, page after page… [The story] would be perfect to accompany a study of landforms and bodies of water and provide rich facts for a discussion of the importance of keeping our planet's water supply healthy. Eager readers will enjoy poring over the illustrations and diagrams.” —Youth Services Book Review

★Included in American Scientist’s 2021 Holiday Gift Guide★ “‘[The river] has hidden depths beneath its surface. Just like people,’ observes the little girl who narrates this poetic children’s book. Its title, What Is a River?, is a question she asks her grandma while the two sit on a riverbank and the girl picks flowers for a wreath. Her grandma gives an appropriately meandering and deep answer as she embroiders a tablecloth, which is a metaphor for the theme of interconnectedness emphasized in the book. Her answer is made up of a lovely balance of facts and metaphors, accompanied by pencil and mixed-media illustrations. A river is a thread connecting people across space and time, a journey, a home to all sorts of living things, a refreshment, a name, a meeting place, a mystery, a history, a smell, depth, energy, a reflection of humanity, a connection, a flow, and a story constantly being written. No one definition or metaphor can fully describe a river. But by the end of the book, a child reading it has a sense of what a river is, not just physically or geographically, but also in essence—emotionally, culturally, and historically… The layout of What Is a River? makes it possible for readers to take quick dips as they turn the pages, or to dive deeper into the many tributaries and pools that the narrator and her grandma explore as they journey through this reverie.” —American Scientist