The Rose in My Garden

by Arnold Lobel

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Description

A variety of flowers grows near the hollyhocks that give shade to the bee that sleeps on the only rose in a garden.

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13 reviews
Start with a single rose. Add hollyhocks and marigold, sunflowers and zinnias. Voilà! A quiet, tranquil, beautiful garden grows before your eyes. But who's that hiding in the corner?
This poetic book was amazing. I usually do not enjoy poetry very much but this book really changed that. I loved the way the book was set up, the amazing language, and the complex illustrations. The book’s style was so unique and interesting. The first page featured a lone rose and one line on a very empty page saying, “This is the rose in my garden.” Each page added a line of poetry to the blank page and an additional illustration to the rose. By the end of the book the poem took up multiple pages and the illustrations were beautiful and detailed. The style of this book made it super enjoyable for the reader but the beautiful language is what really made the book so great. The descriptive language that described the flowers, show more animals, and insects in the garden made the reader intrigued. I loved the line that said, “These are the sunflowers tallest of all, that rise by the tulips sturdy and tall. That circle the pansies placed in a clump, that crowd all the peonies pleasingly plump.” This detailed rhyme creates a thorough image in the head of the reader. I can almost see these flowers all meeting together in this garden and the language just makes it so seemingly beautiful. The illustrations were very important to enhance this story. I have never read a children’s book with such beautiful, detailed drawings. The illustrations were colorful and bright and amazing. These illustrations went side by side with the descriptive language to create an amazing experience for the reader. The main idea of this story was to give show the reader the beauty of the garden they are writing about. I loved this poetic book and would recommend it to any intermediate reader! show less
What a feast for the eyes and balm for the soul. Starting with one lone flower, Lobel adds another, then another, and another to complete an incredible garden filled with zinnias, pansys, roses, marigolds and hollyhocks (to name a few).

Each rendition is incredibly beautiful with an ending of bee feasting on the nectar of a flower and a cat who cannot help but explore the bee, with the end result of a cat who is stung.

Such is nature in all the glory and splendor!

Highly recommended! Lobel is the award-winning author of the Frog and Toad Together children's series.
"This is the rose in my garden. This is the bee that sleeps on the rose in my garden. These are the hollyhocks high above the ground, that give shade to the bee that sleeps on the rose in my garden..." Up until the fieldmouse hiding amongst all the flowers, followed by the cat chasing the mouse that etc. etc. eventually wakes up the bee sleeping on the rose -- that stings the cat on the nose. (Similar to This is the House That Jack Built...) Beautiful illustrations of roses, hollyhocks, marigolds, zinnias, daisies, harebells, lilies, peonies, pansies, tulips, and sunflowers.
It feels terrible saying you don't like a children's book, but I really didn't like this one. I loved Anita Lobe's illistrations, but I didn't like the text. It was too repetative for me.
A garden with multitudes of flowers. Each page adds another flower. Finally it ends with a curious cat getting stung by a bee. Really cute story and very accurate.

Pierce College Library
3-6 Years
A cumulative, "this is the house that Jack built" type of story/rhyme/poem.

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99+ Works 73,794 Members
Arnold Stark Lobel (May 22, 1933-December 4, 1987) was a popular American author of children's books. Among his most popular books are those of the Frog and Toad series, and Mouse Soup, which won the Garden State Children's Book Award from the New Jersey Library Association. Lobel won the 1981 Caldecott Medal for his book, Fables. Lobel also show more illustrated the works of other authors. A notable example is Sam the Minuteman by Nathaniel Benchley, which was first published in 1969. He was born in Los Angeles, California. When he graduated from art school, he married Anita Kempler, who also achieved fame as a children's book author and illustrator. Lobel died ion December 4,1987 due to complications arising from AIDS. He was 54 years old. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Lobel, Anita (Illustrator)

Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1984

Classifications

Genres
Children's Books, Picture Books, Poetry
DDC/MDS
811Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican poetry
LCC
PZ8.3 .L82 .RLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
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Statistics

Members
687
Popularity
41,584
Reviews
11
Rating
½ (3.28)
Languages
English, Japanese
Media
Paper
ISBNs
15
ASINs
1