Martin’s characterization of the two contrary sisters is especially moving: Rose is the type of person who “holds on to a thing she loved as tightly as she could,” while Snow wants “to see or hear or taste something she loved over and over again, to remind herself that it was real.” The sisters’ contradictions make their relationship all the stronger, and Martin’s prim full-color paintings and spot illustrations tenderly highlight key characters and moments. Unfolding over episodic chapters that build to a well-deserved happy ending, this moody fairy tale emphasizes family, friendship, and the powerful bond of sisterhood. Random House, 17.99 (224p) ISBN 978-8-2 Sisters Snow and Rose once lived a charmed life in a grand house with a beautiful garden. There, they befriend a boy named Ivo, discover a mysterious library filled not with books but objects, are tricked by a strange little man, and bond with a protective bear. After their father disappears into the woods, the girls and their mother are forced to move into a small cottage in the same forest. When she was small, she spent every moment drawing, reading, dressing rabbits in fancy clothes, and having many peculiar daydreams. Sisters Snow and Rose once lived a charmed life in a grand house with a beautiful garden. Emily Winfield Martin makes paintings, books, and other things.
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