Cozy in Love
by Jan Brett
New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 2022
Suggested Grade and Interest Level: Pre through 2nd
Topics to Explore: Animals (musk ox, puffin, beluga whale); Friendship; Kindness and empathy; Winter season; Geography, Ice regions.
Skills to Target: Vocabulary (attributes, adjectives, synonyms, prepositions); Grammar and syntax (i.e., present, past, and future tenses, regular and irregular plural forms of nouns); Language literacy (sometimes called Text Structures): Predicting, Sequencing events, Cause-effect relationships, Problem-solving, Drawing inferences, Answering Why-questions); Articulation (especially K, F, and L), and more.
Synopsis: Cozy, the musk ox, who has just been in a duel of strength to win the heart of lovely Lofti, lays low in the snow after his defeat. When his friend, Puffin, swoops by with an urgent message, he soon forgets his troubles and rushes to try and save Bella. The young beluga whale didn’t heed her mother’s warning to leave Teardrop Inlet. The freezing ice has now trapped her inside the inlet, with no way out. Cozy devises a way to help her out of the icy barricade with his strength and big heart. He not only saves Bella but wins the heart of Lofti in a far better way to reveal one’s true self.
Before the read-aloud, set the stage for the story about to unfold by talking about the setting. For those who aren’t familiar with arctic environments, there is a lot to understand. For example,
- Talk about the region of Alaska, the U.S.’s 49th state, and the wildlife there, especially the animals that will appear in the story (puffins, whales, fish, and mammals with lots of fur to keep them warm). If the child is familiar with the predecessor book, Cozy, recall that Cozy is so wooly and kindhearted that he keeps many other Arctic animals warm, nestled underneath his coat.
- Show where Alaska is situated, on the Bearing Sea (named so in the story). Describe how ice forms along the edge of the sea, on land, as well as in the water, just as it is shown on the cover. Talk about what a glacier is and explain how they can contain large pieces of soil and vegetation, called tundra, and rock. They can move and slide across the land as well as on water due to factors of their weight, temperature, and gravity.
- Read the title and author of the story and talk about the two musk oxen in relation to one another on the cover. Describe them, pointing out their long, wooly hair and curved horns. Their heads are so close together. Ask questions such as
- How do you think they are feeling toward each other?
- What do their expressions tell you about how they are feeling?
Point out the other characters, the whale, and puffins, and suggest that they may have something to do with the story. Build anticipation with words such as, “Let’s find out!”
During the read-aloud, encourage Predictions and story explanations based especially on the added details of Jan Brett’s signature border illustrations.
For example, on the first page, the text and main illustration tell the story of two musk oxen in a traditional battle of horns to win a sweetheart. Inside the border we can see there is more to the story.
- A group of oxen with their shaggy coats stand together, presumably watching the challenge.
- A puffin flies overhead in front of an ice cliff with three fish in its mouth.
- Around the border are fragments of the sea, such as coral, seaweed, starfish, and heart-shaped rocks.
Invite the child to tell more about what is happening in this scene based on the pictures along the borders.
Pointing out these features is a great way to involve young children in the story. It also sets the stage for more to come involving the characters in the story.
On turning the page, the border pictures again add to the story with the puffins standing at the water’s edge looking on, and other with fish in its mouth.
Ask Prediction questions, such as, “What do you think the puffins are looking at?”
In this way, you are teaching the child what thoughtful readers do when reading a story, even though they may not have all the pieces together yet. You are also teaching the child to look for clues as the story presents them.
To build Vocabulary, synonyms, and word-networking skills, look for opportunities to pause for better understanding. (It’s good to be ready with the answers!) Words include:
- Massive (huge)
- Flukes (parts of a whale’s tail)
- Perches (resting places)
- Heave (to lift and throw with one’s might)
- Boulders (massive rocks)
- Glacier (a large body of ice that moves slowly on the surface of the land)
- Tussocks (icy, grassy plateaus or flat surfaces in the ice)
- Pod (a school, or group of animals clustered together)
- Horn boss (the large hard base across the head of the musk ox from which the horns project)
- Qiviut (the wool of the musk ox’s undercoat)
- Muzzle (the projecting part of the animal’s face, including the nose and mouth)
To work on Attributes, use the strong features of the animals as well as their characters as you think of words to describe them. For example, Cozy is:
- Massive
- Hairy
- Furry
- Soft
- Strong
- Gentle
- Loving
- Kind
The puffins are:
- Colorful
- Good swimmers
- Hungry
- Concerned
- Caring
- Helpful
Bella is:
- Humorous
- Joyful
- Fun loving
- Distractible
To work on Adjectives, use the words you brainstormed as attributes and create sentences to describe the characters.
To work on Prepositions, talk about the story in terms of the movement of the action that takes place. Books about animals on the shore and in the water make ideal material for targeting prepositions. Include prepositional phrases if appropriate for the developmental level of the child. Some suggestions:
- The musk ox run acrossthe snow.
- Cozy lays downin the snow.
- The puffin flies overCozy’s head.
- Bella plays with seaweed on topof her head.
- Bella and her mother swim underthe ocean.
- They swim over the seashells.
- Cozy stands abovethe inlet.
- Cozy looks downat the inlet.
- The boulder splashed intothe water.
- Bella dances inthe sea.
To work on Grammar and Syntax, use your conversation about the story to structure present, past and future tenses.
- Cozy is lying in the snow.
- The puffin droppedthe fish.
- The mama whale toldBella not to stay long.
- The ice will
And so on.
The illustrations offer further opportunities to structure Regular and Irregular Forms of Nouns. Discuss how some forms of plurals end in different suffixes, and some end with no suffix at all, like fish. Some examples from the story, like:
- one puffin, two puffins
- one whale, two whales
- one ox, two oxen
- one fish, two fish
Then use the words in sentences about what’s happening in the story to further the context.
To continue supporting the development of Language Literacy skills, help the child explain the Cause-and-Effect relationships that occur throughout the story. Ask thoughtful questions that require explanation of the occurrence.
For example, when the puffin flew over Cozy, the big musk ox didn’t hear it. Then a fish landed on his nose. Ask,
- What made that happen?” (The puffin dropped it. The puffin had to plea for help! He had to use his beak to speak!)
Encourage use of the words because and so that in giving full descriptions.
- The puffin dropped the fish on Cozy so thathe would look up at him.
- The puffin dropped the fish becausehe wanted Cozy to wake up.
In another example, the story says the puffins laughed “when [Bella] paraded by with seaweed on her head.” Point out the border illustrations that show the puffins enjoying the sight and Bella loving to play.
- What made the puffins laugh?
- How did Bella get seaweed on her head?
- Why did the puffins “topple off their perches”?
Help children Draw Inferences in expressing the meaning of the text. Often the more concrete language learners face challenges in making those second steps in processing that are necessary to understand the text. Pictures can be helpful, along with a guided set of explanations.
For example, when Cozy sees a chunk of glacial ice break off and splash into the inlet, the text says she
“….thought the wave might be big enough to help push Bella to freedom.”
Ask thoughtful questions in logical order to help create the meaning. Be ready to give the answers yourself. Questions might go something like this:
- What made the big wave? (Big chunk of ice dropped into the sea)
- What would happen in the water if a big chunk of ice splashed into the sea? (It would push the displaced water to make the level of the rest of the water higher)
- If it caused the water around it to increase, how could Bella get out of the inlet? (The higher water would cover the ice trapping her in and she could swim over it).
- What does it mean to “push Bella to freedom”? (Once she is out of the inlet she is no longer trapped. She is free to swim away and be with her family on the other side)
Other places to pause and infer meaning from the story occur at the text, such as
“Puffin landed on one of the nearby boulders carried down by the glacier.”
Ask questions such as
- How did the boulder move?
- Where was the boulder?
- Can you imagine how big the glacier was that carried the boulder across the land?
After the read-aloud, discuss the story to continue enhancing Language Literacy skills.
To work on Sequencing events, go back over the story by doing a “picture walk.” Sequence the story events shown in the illustrations using connecting words such as first, next, then, and finally.
To express Cause-Effect Relationships, structure sentences about what happened in terms of what caused it to happen. Using a repetitive structure makes the learning easier. For example,
- When the puffin dropped a fish on Cozy’s nose, it caused _______ (him to look up).
- When Bella didn’t get out of the inlet, it caused _______ (her to be trapped by ice).
- When Cozy pushed big chunks of ice into the inlet, it caused _________ (a big wave).
- When the sea made a big wave, it caused _____________ (water to rise higher).
Work on Problem-Solution strategies that help build storytelling skills. For example, ask
- What was the problem in the story?
- How did Cozy try to solve the problem?
- Did all her first attempts work?
- What did she do then?
- How did the animals feel after Cozy helped Bella escape the ice that enclosed her?
To work on Answering Why Questions, ask questions to which answers may be found in the illustrations.
For example, as Cozy pushes the rock off the cliff, point to Bella encircled by the ice that is trapping her and ask,
- Why can’t Bella escape over the ice?
- Why does Cozy think pushing rocks off the cliff will save Bella?
- Why did Cozy keep pushing so many boulders into the inlet?
And when you conclude the story ask,
- Do you feel good about how the story ends? Why is that?
To work on Articulation skills, consider all the opportunities to work on words with K, F, and L phonemes.
K words: Cozy, musk, ox, sparkle, catching, heartbreaking, aching, coat, caring, Alaskan, cold, qiviut, and squeaked.
F words: Lofti, fall, freeze, freezes, freezing, froze, puffin, frantic, starfish, safe, freedom, friend, and soft.
L words: love, lovely, Lofti, bellowed, Bella, inlet, whale, leaped, bells, playing, splashed, flukes, beluga, laughter, waterfall, level, boulders, and rolling.
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Learn more about Jan Brett with a visit to her website. See what other places her love of writing for children has taken her to for inspiration.
https://www.janbrett.com/biography.htm
Find more picture books by Jan Brett and book treatments such as these, including her first published book as author/illustrator, Fritz and the Beautiful Horses, in Books Are for Talking, Too! (Fourth Edition).
Available now on Amazon