Once there was a boy, and that boy loved stars very much. So much so that he decided to catch one of his very own. But how? Waiting for them to grow tired from being up in the sky all night doesn't work. Climbing to the top of the tallest tree? No, not tall enough. The boy has a rocket ship . . . but it is made of paper and doesn't fly well at all. Finally, just when the boy is ready to give up, he learns that sometimes things aren't where, or what, we expect them to be.
Oliver Jeffers offers a simple, childlike tale of reaching for the stars, and emerging with a friend.
Merve Emre is a contributing writer for the New Yorker and a nonfiction author.
@davidedgarwolf Everything by Oliver Jeffers: Lost and Found, Up and Down, How to Catch a Star, A Child of Books, The Incredible Book Eating Boy, The Fate of Fausto, his alphabet primer (the name escapes me), etc.
We are a 5 teacher school just outside Limerick City
Junior and senior infants wrote their final drafts today of how they would catch a star after reading the story book ‘How to catch a star’ by Oliver Jeffers ⭐️ @OliverJeffers @PDSTLiteracy https://t.co/mE7lXfF4Ah