Beti and the Little Round House

Beti and baby Jac live in a cosy little round house built by their Mam and Tad in the woods beneath the mountains in Wales. Living close by are Mr Crouch; his house is a tumbledown round one, and in a ferny house live Beti’s friend, Billie, and her mother Fern.
The book follows Beti and the adventures she has presented in four stories, one for each season, starting in the spring when Beti celebrates her birthday with a party and receives a surprise present in the form of a goat to provide her with milk every day; make that a double surprise for along with the mother goat comes a tiny little baby one. Beti names them Goat and Naughty.

When summer comes, Beti enjoys collecting food from the garden – peas and strawberries but she’s not the only one eager to gobble them up: Naughty has her eyes on them too. Back indoors, the little girl has problems amusing her little brother so Tad sends her out and she goes to visit Billie and together the two friends, aided by another friend, Blue, spend the rest of the day endeavouring to fill up an enormous jar with water from the nearby waterfall.

Unsurprisingly there are spills aplenty but also magical seeming dragonflies to assist – fairies, so Beti tells Mam and Tad.

Autumn brings dark evenings and lots of berries to pick and make into pies before the birds gobble them all. There’s also fierce stormy weather that reminds Beti of a dragon with its roaring sounds and she falls asleep somewhere that isn’t her snuggly bed in the little round house. The day ends well though, with huge helpings of Mam’s delicious pie.

With winter comes the ice and snow, a poorly Mam, escaped horses and Beti overcomes her fear of the dark.

Sheer delight from cover to cover. With its gentle humour, Atinuke’s gorgeous descriptions of the natural world and Emily Hughes’ wonderful colour or black and white illustrations on every spread, and themes of family love, friendship and the power of believing in oneself, this is a lovely book to read aloud to foundation stage children. For most of them the portrayal of a simple way of life will be something entirely new.

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