Inside the making of MINE! by award-winning collaborators Candace Fleming and Eric Rohmann!

Read a special Q&A with the creators of Mine!

Mine!

Mine! By Candace Fleming; illustrated by Eric Rohmann

This rhythmic read-aloud about sharing by an award-winning author and a Caldecott medalist features a series of hilariously selfish forest animals.

In a tall, tall tree, at the tip-tippy top, hangs a single red apple...
 
    Along skirts Mouse. “An apple!” she squeaks, "How divine! When it tumbles to the ground, it’ll all be mine!” 
    And so it goes, for Hare, Fox, Deer, and Bear, who each can't wait to get their hands on the apple. 
    Soon the wind huffs and puffs, the branch snips and snaps, and down the apple falls. Only one shiny red apple for five furry creatures? What are they to do?! 
    Here is a read-aloud picture book, perfect for storytime, that will have kids repeating the refrain “Mine!”... complete with an ending that celebrates sharing and is sure to surprise! 

Watch the Inside the Illustrators Studio video to see how Michaela Goade (Remember), Eric Rohmann (Mine!), Frank Morrison (Harlem at Four), and Rudy Gutierrez (Window Fishing) create their books.

Candace Fleming

Candace Fleming is the prolific and versatile award-winning author of many acclaimed books for children and young adults. Her most recent picture book, Honeybee, illustrated by Eric Rohmann, received seven starred reviews and the Robert F. Sibert Medal and appeared on countless Best of the Year lists. Candace’s other picture books include Oh, No!, which received three starred reviews, as well as Muncha! Muncha! Muncha!, which received tons of state recognition and was an NYPL and School Library Journal Best Book. Visit her on the web at candacefleming.com.

 

 

Eric Rohmann

Eric Rohmann is the author/illustrator of the Caldecott Medal-winning My Friend Rabbit and the Caldecott Honor Book Time Flies. He also illustrated Candace Fleming’s Giant Squid, which received three starred reviews, and Honeybee, recipient of the Robert F. Sibert Medal, which the New York Times called “positively riveting.” Visit him at ericrohmann.com

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