Being the youngest in the family is hard for Li'l Rabbit at Kwanzaa. Unlike his siblings, he can't create elaborate gifts to share. He does find a way to contribute to the celebration, though. Granna is too sick to cook the big feast, Karamu, that she usua
Being the youngest in the family is hard for Li’l Rabbit at Kwanzaa. Unlike his siblings, he can’t create elaborate gifts to share. He does find a way to contribute to the celebration, though. Granna is too sick to cook the big feast, Karamu, that she usually prepares. Li’l Rabbit remembers Granna saying that Kwanzaa is a special time for helping others, and he tells the family’s animal friends that she is ill. In a warm surprise, the animals come together with food and gifts to celebrate with Granna. From bespectacled Poppa Squirrel reading in a tree and carpenter Groundhog with his tool belt to Momma Field Mouse pulling her children in a waggon, the characters in Evans’ very bright, playful, textured pictures capture the spirit of community that is the essence of the holiday. The two final pages about \
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