On This Page

Description

Katy's Easter morning discovery renews the tradition of the Easter egg tree.

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

26 reviews
Spending their first Easter at Grandmom's farm in the country, Katy and Carl join in the Easter Egg Hunt with their cousins, but find that they're not very successful at tracking down those brightly colored treats. Then Katy finds her way to the attic, where she discovers an old hatbox full of gorgeously decorated eggs, made by Grandmom when she was a little girl. Painted in traditional folk styles, these eggs are so lovely that the children ask to be taught how to create them themselves, and when they have learned the skill, create enough to make a gorgeous egg-tree...

Originally published in 1950, and awarded the Caldecott Medal in 1951, The Egg Tree is a lovely book, one which pairs an engaging story of Pennsylvania Dutch show more (German-American) Easter traditions with beautiful folk-art illustrations. Before picking the book up, I was unaware of the German Ostereierbaum (Easter Egg Tree) tradition, but apparently it is many centuries old, and was brought by German immigrants to the United States. Although I have some German ancestry on my father's side, this tradition is unknown in my family, so I was happy to learn of it. Apparently, the most well-known example of an Ostereierbaum is the one in Saalfeld, Thuringia, which is decorated every year with thousands of eggs:



In any case, I found the story here sweetly appealing, enjoyed learning about a new-to-me Easter tradition, and found the folk-style artwork beautiful. Recommended to picture-book readers looking for Easter stories, or for tales with a Pennsylvania Dutch cultural backdrop.
show less
First published in 1950 and awarded The Caldecott Medal in 1951, The Egg Tree by Katherine Milhous, is a delightful picture book, history lesson and celebration of springtime that I think you'll love sharing with your children.

This short, uncomplicated picture book features the farm traditions and holiday folk art of the Spring/Easter season as practiced by the Pennsylvania Dutch people in the early 1930s-1950s. The traditions date much further back to Germany, the country of origin of the Pennsylvania Dutch. These people were the original German immigrants in Pennsylvania before the Revolutionary War. Familiar symbols of Easter/Spring such as eggs and rabbits or hares have been used to celebrate the Spring Equinox since 1500s in show more Germany.

The book describes the excitement of Katy and Carl, two Pennsylvania Dutch children who are old enough to participate for the first time in the children's Easter Egg Hunt. They know that the Easter Rabbit will bring colored eggs and hide them for all the good boys and girls. Katy sprinkles flower petals across the lawn to attract the Easter Bunny. They enjoy special Easter treats that Grandmom bakes for them and they have a wonderful time racing around with the other children on the day of the big hunt. At first Katy is a bit disappointed because as the youngest she is having trouble finding very many eggs.

"Who would think that the Rabbit had left eggs in the feed bin, in the watering trough, and even up in the hayloft?"

It's no easier for Katy in the garden or in the kitchen. The cousins are piling up the eggs but Katy is coming up empty-handed...until she decides to look up in the attic. There she finds a clutch of the most beautiful eggs she has ever seen.

The eggs turn out to be some beautiful hand-painted, fragile eggs that Grandmom had blown and decorated herself when she was just a girl. Long forgotten the eggs seem to have been left just for Katy by the Easter Rabbit but Grandmom tells the children the history of the eggs and explains the symbols that are painted on them. She also teaches them how to make their own. The boys are taught the art of "scratching" their designs on the eggshells while the girls learn first to dye the eggs and then to hand paint designs on them. Grandmom goes outside and cuts a small tree and brings it in. She hangs the painted eggs and puts other Easter symbols underneath the little tree.

"It is such a beautiful tree!" said Katy. "I wish that everyone in the world could see it!"

"Yes," said Grandmom. "It makes a body feel as if Spring has come right into the house. We must give a party for it."

Friends and relatives are invited over to see the tree and this leads to the tradition of the Egg Tree that keeps growing bigger and better every Easter/Spring to come.

The writing is evocative and easy for children to follow. It is a suitable story for children from 4-9 years of age but if you make the book a part of your annual Spring celebration as we do in our home even older children will want to hear its familiar tale each year. Last year when it was taken out for my 5 year old granddaughter Gigi who was inspired by it, I noticed my 34 year old son just happened to have some pressing business in the kitchen in ear-shot of our storytime. I think this is a book that definitely pulls on the heartstrings and has the rosy glow of sentimental tradition. "Are we, I mean, is Gigi making an Egg Tree this year, Mom?"

The illustrations are mostly single full-page with a few partial and a few double-page spreads. There is most often one page of text to one page of illustration. So many visually-cued sentences move the story forward that even though it is agrarian, old-time action it easily holds the attention of children.

I also like this book very much for how it cleverly inserts information about Pennsylvania Dutch traditions into the action of the story rather than describing these things in a how-to format. The decorations on the bottoms of the pages are actual folk art patterns passed down by the hand of tradition. The illustrations are all done in the manner of Pennsylvania Dutch hex signs and all of the ones in this book use simple pastel colors of peach, yellow, white, green and a slate blue. Grandmom's old-fashioned heirloom eggs feature the designs called The Bright and Morning Star, The Deer On the Mountain, The Cooing Dove, The Pomegranate and The Horn-blowing Rooster and several others. A traditional cookie rabbit sometimes called a Rabbit Cake is shown in the story. Lots of details from a working farm of that era are shown and the characters all dress in the traditional style which looks similar to what you would see today in Amish country.

I think this is a beautiful book and I love the arts and crafts it suggests. I love the Spring fertility and hopeful promise traditions and iconography it highlights. This is a book that is perfect for this time of year regardless of one's particular religious beliefs because what it really celebrates is Spring and renewal and the joys associated with those concepts.

I think it succeeds beautifully as a children's book due to its excellence in art, story fun and story learning. I recommend it highly but I think that materialistic present day Easter holiday trends might make the simpler times and practices depicted here seem, for a modern child, a tad dull by comparison. We've kept the old ways alive in my family so we do consistently love this book, generation after generation. The back of the book jacket has simple directions for making an Egg Tree and there are numerous tips within the story for the other Easter/Spring crafts. I do suspect that the innocent heart of childhood will embrace it now as much as ever if given half a chance.
show less
Milhous tells a story of a long ago Easter, when the children spend time at their grandparents’ Pennsylvania farm. Along with their cousins Katy and Carl hunt for Easter eggs, but Katy isn’t having much luck, until she heads for the attic and finds a treasure trove of beautifully decorated eggs in a hatbox.

This was a delightful story that tells of a long-time family tradition. I like how the children become interested and then eager to participate in this tradition that had fallen by the wayside. The book shows the family working together to decorate the eggs, and even bringing in other people from the area.

I was somewhat disappointed in the illustrations. Given the topic, and knowing that Milhous won the Caldecott Medal for this show more book, I was expecting more vibrant coloring. Instead, she uses a rather muted palette. Still, I do like the expressions on the faces of the people (adults and children, alike), as well as the detailed drawings of some of the traditional egg designs. show less
Katherine Milhous has a very unique style for her book, 'The Egg Tree' as both its author and illustrator. Her style on this piece won her a Caldecott Medal. The story is about a girl going on her first egg hunt with her family. The girl ends up hoping to share a new passion for Easter by decorating a stripped tree with painted eggs. The colors throughout the entire story are ones that you'd expect to see around Easter; lots of pinks and yellows. The artwork itself reminds me of those old clay animated holiday specials like Frosty the Snowman, and Rudolph, The Red Nosed Reindeer. Th art is simple in the characters' designs with the eggs standing out as the colorfully detailed pieces of work. I personally was not a fan of the style of show more the story or the art, aside from the egg paintings. The whole thing was a bit too happy, jolly for me. But that may have been the point of it all for this story's tone. show less
½
The Egg Tree is a wonderful story about a young girl named Katy and her brother Carl who spent one Easter at their grandma’s farm in Pennsylvania. Katy, Carl and their cousins took part in their first Easter egg hunt. This became very exciting to Katy when she stumbled upon something in the attic that she was enthused to see. Her grandmother had painted a very special set of eggs that she kept in the attic. When Katy found them she wanted to hang them from a tiny tree called the Egg Tree! This became a very special Easter tradition. I really thought this story displayed a lot of great illustrations and told a great story.
Young children wait on Easter morning for the Easter rabbit to bring the Easter eggs. When they see the rabbit, they run to find all the eggs. Little Katy doesn't find any eggs until the very last, but they are beautiful. Then the grandmother brings in a small tree to hang the pretty eggs on. The children decide to make more pretty eggs and hang them on a bigger tree and then the next year they decorate an enormous tree. Many people came to see the tree and the grandmother said it felt like Spring had come into the house.

This would be a cute story to read at Easter to small children and let them decide how they would decorate a pretty egg.
22 months - this is a pretty wordy book so I was happily surprised that it kept your attention. I enjoyed the story although I think it could have been written successfully in fewer words. The passing of traditions is very important and I personally have always loved egg painting. When you are older I think you will too!

Members

Recently Added By

Lists

Caldecott Medal Books
91 works; 15 members
Reading Rainbow
193 works; 10 members
Books Read in 2021
5,361 works; 113 members
Books Read in 2016
4,666 works; 197 members
Picture Books About States
16 works; 1 member

Author Information

Picture of author.
11+ Works 1,253 Members

Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Egg Tree
Original publication date
1950
People/Characters
Easter Bunny
Important events
Easter
First words
It was very early on Easter morning.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)It would never do to forget the Easter Rabbit, for the Easter Rabbit had not forgotten her.
Original language
English

Classifications

Genres
Children's Books, Picture Books
DDC/MDS
394.2667Social sciencesCustoms, etiquette & folkloreGeneral customsSpecial OccasionsHolidaysChristian holidaysEaster
LCC
PZ7 .M596 .ELanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
1,076
Popularity
23,640
Reviews
22
Rating
½ (3.56)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
9
ASINs
12