Even a bookish big sister is drawn in by the promise of her imaginative sibling’s spectacular hideaway.
I have a secret tree fort, and YOU’RE NOT INVITED!
When two sisters are ushered outside to play, one sits under a tree with a book while the other regales her with descriptions of a cool fortina tree that grows ever more fantastical in the telling. What will it take to get the older sister to look up? The promise of a water-balloon launcher in case of attack? A trapdoor to stargaze through? A crow’s nest from which to see how many whales pass by or to watch for pirates? Or the best part of all, which can’t be revealed, because it’s asecret?Creating a world of one’s own as a child is the beginning of our stories, Farley shows — and is sometimes made more vivid when shared with a sibling or friend. —New York Times Book Review
Like a beloved box rattling with tiny, precious, ferreted things, this delightful picture book holds small, wonderfully specific insights into childhood imaginings, feelings, and frustrations. —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
The text, written from the younger sister’s perspective, is clear and appropriately simple, the large font and spacing between sentences making it approachable for beginning readers...This is a familiar and fun story, and a good resource for children with siblings. —School Library Journal
Farley knows that, for many kids, the imagining can be as good as the having, and while the older girl eventually takes pity on her sister, the story reveals a keen emotional understanding of the frustration of being unable to bend a loved but dissimilar sibling to one’s will. —Publishers Weekly
Characters, along with the fantastical figments of the younger sister’s imagination, are appealingly rendered in mixed-media illustrations that give a nod to child-made drawings. Similc.