Jonah and the Great Big Fish, by Rhonda Gowler Greene, tells the well-known Bible story in rhyme. Unlike many similar offerings, Greene's is a pretty thorough retelling, beginning with God commanding Jonah to travel to Ninevah and preach to the people there. Instead, Jonah tries to flee from God, boarding a ship sailing away from Ninevah.
"As he rested down below, a mighty wind began to blow. Angry waves from the sea whipped that ship so violently. Splashing, crashing waves so tall made that ship prove weak and small." Finally, the sailors throw Jonah overboard in order to save themselves, and a drowning Jonah is swallowed by a big fish (a whale, in the illustrations by Santiago Cohen). Jonah repents and the whale spits him out onto land. God once again tells Jonah to go to Ninevah and preach, and this time "Jonah listened...and obeyed."
What I Like: I appreciate the completeness of this picture book. Rather than being a too-simple story of a man being swallowed by a whale, the author thoroughly explains how Jonah ended up in that predicament...and how he got himself out of it (by obeying God). Cohen's illustrations are modern, sketchy, and almost cartoonish. The images of life before and after the storm are bright, while the illustrations during the storm - and especially inside the whale - are quite dark...A nice touch.
What I Dislike: Nothing.
Overall Rating: Very Good.
Kristina Seleshanko, editor of Christian Children's Book Review ( ccbreview at blogspot dot com ) |