![]() ![]() It will also make you long to seek out your own forest, to be immersed in nature and to discover (or rediscover) your own kinship to it, so that you too can enjoy what Hazel finds there: serenity, connection and fulfillment. Little Witch Hazel will make you feel as if you have journeyed deep into Mosswood Forest alongside Hazel and her friends. That year, authorities in the tiny settlement of St Maximin, in present-day Germany, charged a woman named Eva with using witchcraft to. In this four-season volume, Little Witch Hazel rescues an orphaned egg, goes sailing on a raft, solves the mystery of a haunted stump and makes house calls to fellow forest dwellers. She's a midwife, an intrepid explorer, a hard worker and a kind friend. These sweet stories are an ode to the calm and peaceful magic of nature. Little Witch Hazel is a tiny witch who lives in the forest, helping creatures big and small. ![]() Using earthy shades of brown, green, red and blue, Wahl expertly captures Mosswood Forest and populates it with all sorts of quirky creatures whose interactions make a wonderful backdrop for Hazel’s adventures. Hazel’s can-do attitude and willingness to pitch in make her an appealing heroine. ![]() With a determined spirit, Hazel tends to her fellow inhabitants of the forest in any way that she can, be that inspecting the source of a mysterious wailing tree stump, caring for an abandoned bird egg or taking some well-deserved time to unwind with her friends on a hot summer day.Įach story unfolds in a different season and opens with a title page depicting Hazel dressed for the weather and surrounded by the season’s flora-daffodils in spring, acorns in the fall and so on. Now, for the first time in thirty years, this handsome. Author-illustrator Phoebe Wahl’s fourth picture book, Little Witch Hazel: A Year in the Forest, has a charming woodsy setting that readers will find enchanting.įour vignettes follow Little Witch Hazel, a minuscule witch who wears a pointy red hat and lives in Mosswood Forest. This whimsical 1953 classic consistently tops annual lists of the most in-demand out of print books. ![]()
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