D & M Kids (Douglas & McIntyre)
978-1-771-624817
32 pp.
Ages 3–5
January 2026
Giizis is rising, the day is brand new.
Let's learn some words nature's gathered for you. (pg. 3)
So begins Bridget George's It's a Mitig!, a picture book originally published in 2020 and now available as a board book, perfect for a concept book for teaching Ojibwe (Anishinaabemowin) words.
With the rising of the sun (giizis), readers are taken from place to place to meet a variety of animals and plants. From the ashigan (bass) to the gaag (porcupine), Bridget George introduces Ojibwe words. She never uses the words "sun" or "bass" or "porcupine" but the children to whom the text is read will put the visual and textual clues together and determine what these new words mean. And, because she uses short rhyming verse, Bridget George makes the text playful and easy to remember. Moreover, her text is always informative and clear in evoking the name of each subject. For example, the text for a bird tells the reader that, "This animal whistles and lives in a tree. Building a nest, it's a bineshiinh." (pg. 11) Bineshiinh is obviously the Ojibwe word for "bird."
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| From It's a Mitig!, written and illustrated by Bridget George |
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| From It's a Mitig!, written and illustrated by Bridget George |




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