SUMMARY: A beautifully illustrated novel about a mouse, her friendship with Audubon's apprentice, and her search for home. Beneath the crackled and faded painting of a horse, underneath the worn and dusty floorboards of the dining room, lives Celeste, a mouse who spends her days weaving baskets, unt
A Nest for Celeste: A Story About Art, Inspiration, and the Meaning of Home
β Scribed by Cole, Henry
- Book ID
- 106904569
- Publisher
- HarperCollins
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 4 MB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9780061704109
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Amazon.com Review
A Nest for Celeste is a perfect choice for middle readers who enjoy animal adventure tales with a twist.Β --Lauren Nemroff
From School Library Journal
Grade 3β5βAt Oakley Plantation near New Orleans, temporary home to naturalist John James Audubon and his assistant, Joseph Mason, lives a mouse named Celeste. Industrious and sweet, she forages for food in the dining room and weaves baskets of grass. Unfortunately, she is harassed by resident rats, and, attempting to assuage their hunger, she is trapped by a cat and unable to return to her nook under the floorboards. A chase brings her to Mason's room and there develops a friendship between the homesick apprentice and the little mouse. It unfolds that Audubon is no PETA advocateβhe hires hunters to shoot birds so that he can pose them for his drawings. Some of the story is devoted to Celeste's persuading captured birds to pose of their own volition and so save themselves. The theme espoused by the book's subtitle is not well developed, however. Celeste does search for a home, and readers are shown the two naturalists drawing and feeling frustrated when the art does not come easily, but Cole's description of the emotions inherent in the theme does not evoke them in readers. The story's bittersweet conclusion is similarly unsatisfying. What sets the book apart are the charming pencil illustrations that appear throughout, sometimes filling whole pagesβa story about making art, full of art.β_Lisa Egly Lehmuller, St. Patrick's Catholic School, Charlotte, NC_
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π SIMILAR VOLUMES
### Amazon.com Review *A Nest for Celeste* is a perfect choice for middle readers who enjoy animal adventure tales with a twist.Β *--Lauren Nemroff* ### From School Library Journal Grade 3β5βAt Oakley Plantation near New Orleans, temporary home to naturalist John James Audubon and his assistant,
SUMMARY: A beautifully illustrated novel about a mouse, her friendship with Audubon's apprentice, and her search for home. Beneath the crackled and faded painting of a horse, underneath the worn and dusty floorboards of the dining room, lives Celeste, a mouse who spends her days weaving baskets, unt
Searching a plantation house for a place to call her own, Celeste, a kindly mouse, evades rats and a cat and befriends human Joseph, the artist Audubon's assistant. When she is lost outdoors in a storm, Celeste convinces an osprey to fly her back to Joseph. For grades 3-6. 2010.
Celeste, a mouse longing for a real home, becomes a source of inspiration to teenaged Joseph, assistant to the artist and naturalist John James Audubon, at a New Orleans, Louisiana, plantation in 1821.
A beautifully illustrated novel about a mouse, her friendship with Audubon's apprentice, and her search for home. Beneath the crackled and faded painting of a horse, underneath the worn and dusty floorboards of the dining room, lives Celeste, a mouse who spends her days weaving baskets, until one d