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Afternoon on a Hill - Premium Outdoor Blanket for Picnics, Beach & Camping - Waterproof & Portable Picnic Mat for Family Outings, Park Relaxation and Outdoor Adventures Afternoon on a Hill - Premium Outdoor Blanket for Picnics, Beach & Camping - Waterproof & Portable Picnic Mat for Family Outings, Park Relaxation and Outdoor Adventures Afternoon on a Hill - Premium Outdoor Blanket for Picnics, Beach & Camping - Waterproof & Portable Picnic Mat for Family Outings, Park Relaxation and Outdoor Adventures
Afternoon on a Hill - Premium Outdoor Blanket for Picnics, Beach & Camping - Waterproof & Portable Picnic Mat for Family Outings, Park Relaxation and Outdoor Adventures
Afternoon on a Hill - Premium Outdoor Blanket for Picnics, Beach & Camping - Waterproof & Portable Picnic Mat for Family Outings, Park Relaxation and Outdoor Adventures
Afternoon on a Hill - Premium Outdoor Blanket for Picnics, Beach & Camping - Waterproof & Portable Picnic Mat for Family Outings, Park Relaxation and Outdoor Adventures
Afternoon on a Hill - Premium Outdoor Blanket for Picnics, Beach & Camping - Waterproof & Portable Picnic Mat for Family Outings, Park Relaxation and Outdoor Adventures
Sku: 17736117 in stock
$1265
$2300
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Estimated Delivery: 10-15 days international
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In this whimsically illustrated book, a poem expresses the joys of being out in the natural world as "the gladdest thing under the sun."

Reviews

A poem by Edna St. Vincent Millay gets an illustrated treatment. The 12 lines of Millay’s 1917 poem provide the whole text for this glorious nature outing. “I will be the gladdest thing / Under the sun!” opens the adventure, as the anonymous first-person narrator runs over grassy hills wearing a short-sleeved calico dress and sneakers. The poem can be read literally as realism, but in the illustrations, a fantasy realm grows. When the lines say “I will touch a hundred flowers / And not pick one,” a single flower grows to the scale of a sapling. The heads of massive birds peer out from between trees, their eyes intense and just this side of ominous. A forest, from a long view, is shaped like an animal, absorbing (not reflecting) sunlight, even while the narrator’s peachy skin glows with reflected sun. When the poem lets the protagonist “[w]atch the wind bow down the grass, / And the grass rise,” the grass becomes a horizontally billowing ocean for the child to windsurf on, standing upright on an enormous leaf, arms outstretched, hair streaming. The illustrations are all full-bleed spreads; each has a different light. Domeniconi offsets acute, scientific-feeling, almost overpowering visual details on flowers and birds against vague, generic skies and distant trees. At dusk, lights glow in the distant town, and the narrator beds down—nestled in the antlers of a mighty animal, possibly an elk. Romantic and bracing.

Kirkus Reviews (Starred Review), February 1, 2019

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For all orders exceeding a value of 100USD shipping is offered for free.

Returns will be accepted for up to 10 days of Customer’s receipt or tracking number on unworn items. You, as a Customer, are obliged to inform us via email before you return the item.

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