Showing posts with label Love the Illustrations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Love the Illustrations. Show all posts

Thursday, August 29, 2019

Picture Book - We Are Grateful Otsaliheliga by Traci Sorell

A Seibert Honor Book
Illustrated by Frank Lessac
2018 Charlesbridge
HC $17.99
32 thick pgs.
Goodreads rating:  4.28 - 671 ratings
My rating:  5
Endpapers:  Deep, luscious dark purple/eggplant

1st line/s:  "Cherokee people say otsaliheligs (oh-jah-LEE-gah/we are grateful) to express gratitude.  It is a reminder to celebrate our blessings and reflect on struggles - daily, throughout the year, and across the seasons."

My comments: This book is GORGEOUS.  It details the lives of the Cherokee Nation through the seasons, giving the Cherokee words (and pronunciations right on the page, hooray!!), and the simple writing is beautiful.  You close the book with a good feeling, and you want to SHARE! I want to put some of these illustrations on my walls!

Goodreads:  A look at modern Native American life as told by a citizen of the Cherokee Nation
          The word otsaliheliga (oh-jah-LEE-hay-lee-gah) is used by members of the Cherokee Nation to express gratitude. Beginning in the fall with the new year and ending in summer, follow a full Cherokee year of celebrations and experiences. 
          Appended with a glossary and the complete Cherokee syllabary, originally created by Sequoyah.

Wednesday, August 28, 2019

Picture Book Biography - Planting Stories: The Life of Librarian and Storyteller Pura Belpre by Anika Aldamuy Denise

Illustrated by Paola Escobar
2019, Harper Collins
HC $17.99
32pgs.
Goodreads rating:  4.42 - 790 ratings
My rating:  5
Endpapers:  These are the BEST - Candles, Daisies, Mouse groom and Cockroach bride from her stories, books, all on page sage green..
..
1st line/s:  "It is 1921.  Pura Teresa Belpre leaves her home in San Juan for a visit to Nueva York."

My comments: Pura Belpre, whose name I know because of the awards given yearly in her memory, moved from Puerto Rico to New York City when she was 22 years old. Speaking three languages - Spanish, English, and French - she was hired to work in the library. When she realized there were no book in Spanish, and no stories like the ones she'd always heard her grandmother tell, she began to share the stories during storytime, along with puppets she made. Wonderful story. I particularly like the folky illustrations, I'd love to have some fabric that looks like the endpapers!

Goodreads:  Follow la vida y legado of Pura Belpré, the first Puerto Rican librarian in New York City.
          When she came to America in 1921, Pura carried the cuentos folklóricos of her Puerto Rican homeland. Finding a new home at the New York Public Library as a bilingual assistant, she turned her popular stories into libros and spread story seeds across the land. Today, these seeds have grown into a lush landscape as generations of children and cuentistas continue to share her stories and celebrate Pura’s legacy.
          This portrait of the influential librarian, author, and puppeteer reminds us of the power of storytelling and the extraordinary woman who opened doors and championed bilingual literature.

Friday, January 4, 2019

PICTURE BOOK - Dreamers by Yuyi Morales

Illustrated by the author
2018, Neal Porter Books, Holiday House, New York
HC $18.99
32 pgs.
Goodreads rating:  4.66 - 1130 ratings
My rating: 5
Endpapers: interesting....brown wall ?
Illustrations are gorgeous!  This is what she says:  "I painted with acrylics and drew on paper with ink and brushes and a nib-pen that once belonged to Maurice Sendak, given to me by Lynn Caponera.  
To give the book life, I photographed and scanned many things, including the floor of my studio; the comal where I grill my quesadillas; my childhood drawings kept by my mother; a chair; a brick from my house; old walls from the streets of Malinaleo;my hometown of Xalapa, and my house; a metal sheet; traditional Mexican fabrics; crepe, craft, and amate paper; leaves and plants from my garden; an old woven blouse; hand-painted pants I made for my son, Kelly; old wood; water in a bucket; jute twine; a trditional wool skirt from /'Chiapas; Kelly's childhood drawings; my first handmade book; embroidery; and more."

1st line/s:"I dreamed of you, then you appeared.  Together we became Amor - Love - Amor.  Resplendent life, you and I."

My comments:  Oo la la.  The book is simple, gorgeous, and meaningful, especially in this day of controversies surrounding immigration and immigrants themselves.  Her two-page explanation at the end is wonderful.  This is truly a special book.

Goodreads:  Caldecott Honor artist and five-time Pura Belpré Award winner Yuyi Morales tells her own immigration story in this picture-book tribute to the transformative power of hope . . . and reading. An instant New York Times bestseller!
          In 1994, Yuyi Morales left her home in Xalapa, Mexico and came to the US with her infant son. She left behind nearly everything she owned, but she didn't come empty-handed.
          She brought her strength, her work, her passion, her hopes and dreams...and her stories. Caldecott Honor artist and five-time Pura Belpré winner Yuyi Morales's gorgeous new picture book Dreamers is about making a home in a new place. Yuyi and her son Kelly's passage was not easy, and Yuyi spoke no English whatsoever at the time. But together, they found an unexpected, unbelievable place: the public library. There, book by book, they untangled the language of this strange new land, and learned to make their home within it.
          Dreamers is a celebration of what migrants bring with them when they leave their homes. It's a story about family. And it's a story to remind us that we are all dreamers, bringing our own gifts wherever we roam. Beautiful and powerful at any time but given particular urgency as the status of our own Dreamersbecomes uncertain, this is a story that is both topical and timeless.
          The lyrical text is complemented by sumptuously detailed illustrations, rich in symbolism. Also included are a brief autobiographical essay about Yuyi's own experience, a list of books that inspired her (and still do), and a description of the beautiful images, textures, and mementos she used to create this book.
          A parallel Spanish-language edition, Soñadores, is also available

Friday, June 17, 2016

PICTURE BOOK - The Night Gardener by the Fan Brothers

Terry Fan and Eric Fan
2016, Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
$17.99
 40 pgs.
Goodreads rating: 4.02 (2,009 ratings)
My rating: 5
Endpapers lovely pencil-drawn leafy branches on green
Illustrations:  Intricate pencil drawings, some colored, some not.  WINNERS!
1st line/s: "William looked out his window to find a commotion on the street."

My comments: Opening to the first double page spread, I knew this book would be a winner.  Somehow the illustration reminded me of the illustrations in Homer Price, which brought back wonderful memories. I was not disappointed.  Although there is a short, pleasing narrative, this could easily be a wordless book.  It's delightful!

Goodreads:  One day, William discovers that the tree outside his window has been sculpted into a wise owl. In the following days, more topiaries appear, and each one is more beautiful than the last. Soon, William’s gray little town is full of color and life. And though the mysterious night gardener disappears as suddenly as he appeared, William—and his town—are changed forever.

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

POETRY PICTURE BOOK - Flutter & Hum by Julie Paschkis

Aleteoy y Zumbido: Poemas de Animales
Illustrated by the author
2015, Henry Holt & Co.
HC &$17.99
32 pgs.
Goodreads rating: 4.03
My rating:  5
Endpapers: Green
Title Page Single page, decorated with animals from the poems

My comments:  Ah, Julie Paschkis.  One of my all-time favorite illustrators.  And in this gorgeous picture book, she wrote all the poems, too - in two languages!  Some of them just sang out to me.  Others didn't.  She wrote them first in Spanish, then translated to English.  Her illustrations are luscious.  A feast for the eyes.  The few poems that weren't fives for me sounded GREAT in Spanish, even though I couldn't understand a word!
Goodreads:  All sorts of animals flutter and hum, dance and stretch, and slither and leap their way through this joyful collection of poems in English and Spanish. Julie Paschkis's poems and art sing in both languages, bringing out the beauty and playfulness of the animal world.

Snake
Slithering
through
the grass
the sinuous snake
is writing
a slippery poem
with his body.
But his alphabet is
too simple.
He only knows
one letter:
sssssssssss.

Crow
On this gray day
on the gray street
the black crow caws.

He hops,
        stops,
          and stares
at a yellow umbrella --
the only sun shining
today.

Owl
The moon is a lantern
in the branches.
A shimmer.

A shadow whistles
through the grass.
A whisper.

Out of the darkness
an owl hoots.
An echo.

The night train
is leaving.




Wednesday, November 12, 2014

PICTURE BOOK - The Shortest Day by Wendy Pfeffer

Celebrating the Winter Solstice
Illustrated by Jesse Reisch
2003 Dutton Children's Books
HC $16.99 when first published....  **must add this to my collection, love it
40 pgs.
TPPL 394.261P
Goodreads rating: 3.78
My rating: 5 - gorgeous - words and illustrations
Endpapers: purple
Title Page: Dark aqua with winter illustrations in an oval mid-page
1st line/s: 
"In late autumn
in the northern part of the world
squirrels hide nuts,
foxes grow thick fur coats,
and flocks of birds fly to warmer places."

My comments:  Use in class....last day of school before winter break this year is 12/19/14.
          This is a wonderful book on many levels. The illustrations are delicious, full of rich purples, golds, blues.  The kind of loveliness I'd like to frame and put on my walls.  The book explains the "shortest day" - the winter solstice - clearly and simply.  It tells of several ancient cultures' discoveries about the solstices. The book ends with two pages of facts and six wonderful activities:  Making a sunrise/sunset chart, measuring shadows, using a compass, creating a sun and earth demo and having a winter solstice party - for kids AND for the birds!  There's a short list of resources at the very end.  I bet there are some cool books written in the ten years since this list that could be added to it (research time!)

Goodreads:  The beginning of winter is marked by the solstice, the shortest day of the year. Long ago, people grew afraid when each day had fewer hours of sunshine than the day before. Over time, they realized that one day each year the sun started moving toward them again. In lyrical prose and cozy illustrations, this book explains what the winter solstice is and how it has been observed by various cultures throughout history. Many contemporary holiday traditions were borrowed from ancient solstice celebrations. Simple science activities, ideas for celebrating the day in school and at home, and a further-reading list are included.

Saturday, November 8, 2014

PICTURE BOOK - The Right Word: Roget and His Thesaurus by Jen Bryant

Illustrated by Melissa Sweet
2014, Eerdmans
HC $17.50
40 pgs.
Goodreads rating: 4.53
My rating: 5 FOR SURE! My 2nd favorite book of 2014!
Title Page:  double-page spread, blocks of wood with alphabet prints
Endpapers:: vertical strips of vintage papers collaged in thin stripes
At the end of the book there's a two-page detailed, really interesting timeline, a page-long author's note and a page-long illustrator's note, followed by a page of resources and other sorts of information.
1st line/s:  (the book begins with this glorious quote) "The man is not wholly evil - he has a thesaurus in his cabin." (J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan; about Captain Hook....)

My comments: This is much more than a biography of Peter Roget.  As an altered book artist and journaler I find the illustrations just magnificent.  They include words as part of the illustrations.  Lists of words; wallpaper of words; thinking boxes and journal pages - different fonts, paining and collage - wonderful, whimsical words, delicious words....it's almost overwhelming.  I've poured over each page, finding all sorts of inspiration for my own journal-making, writing and art.                   WONDERFUL BOOK!  Roget is my new hero (Jen Bryant and Melissa Sweet are already on that list)!
     I want a literature circle set of this book for my classroom!

Saturday, May 17, 2014

POETRY PICTURE BOOK - A Pond Full of Ink - Annie M. Schmidt

Illustrated by Sieb Posthuma
First published in the US 2014
Original text 1978 in Dutch
Eerdman Books for Young Readers
32 pages
Goodreads rating: 4.42
My rating: Poetry 2 Illustrations 4
Endpapers: Simple sweeps of black (feront) and white (back) ink with a simple figure drawing and "a" on the front and "Z" on the back
Title Page:  Dribbles of ink :)
Illustrations (see my comments)
Sample; first lines from the first poem in the book:
     A fairy tale author I know
starts work every day when the roosters crow.

He writes quickly, he writes without hitches
about fairies and elves and hobgolblins and witches.

He writes about princesses, princes, and kings,
and keeps going till six when the dinner bell rings.....
                    you get the gist......

My comments:  :I can't say I particularly enjoy Schmidt's poetry.  It reminds me too much of kids that write poems and insist they have to rhyme. However, if they were translated from Dutch, that's not her fault, is it?  I'm thinking that they didn't translate well.  So that's NOT Schmidt's fault, which makes the poems extremely difficult to rate. BUT, I LOVE the illustrations. They're simple but with lots and lots of lines and squiggles and zentangly-like doodles.

Goodreads:  Their summary is in Dutch, so I copy here the review of a reader:  Twelve quirky and imaginative poems show the world in a very different world in this collection that looks at common occurrences from a unique lens. For instance, "Nice and Naughty" describes how one mischievous tot simply cannot bear to behave in the proper fashion and prefers to behave badly. The accompanying illustration for that poem, created through drawing and collage, shows how she has tied the mouth of a dog completely shut and tied the left and right shoes of several men and women together. Daringly, there are a couple of double-page spreads that consist solely of art.

Sunday, April 28, 2013

America the Beautiful: Together We Stand- Katherine Lee Bates

Illustrated by Bryan Collier, Raul Colon, Diane Goode, Mary Grandpre, John Hendrix, Yuyi Morales, jon J. Muth, LeUyen Pham, Sonia Lynn Sadler, Chris Soenpiet
Orchard Books, 2013
HC $17.99 (splurged and purchased it)
24 pages
Goodreads rating: 4.10
My rating: 5 (This is an awesome book)
Endpapers: Blue with white stars - Like a closeup of that part of the American flag.
Title Page: Just the title, in huge, bold red and white font

Quotes from presidents Carter, Jefferson, Reagan, Lincoln, Obama, Kennedy, FDR, Washington, GHW Bush, Theodore Roosevelt...

The end pages include national landmarks and symbols.  Gorgeous!

My Goodreads review:  Everything about this book was special. The ten American artists and the illustrations they created. The ten chosen quotes from ten different presidents. The four pages of information at the end. As I teacher, the book SCREAMS mini-lessons. Art, history, language arts, social consciousness....I can even use some of these great quotes for handwriting assignments with meaning and verve. I splurged. I wonder whose brainstorm it was to put it together?

Goodreads summary: Each of our presidents has had a unique vision of America. In AMERICA THE BEAUTIFUL, these ideas are translated into gorgeous illustrations by such top artists as Bryan Collier, Jon J Muth, Diane Goode, Mary GrandPre, Raul Colon, Sonia Lynn Sadler, Yuyi Morales, John Hendrix, LeUyen Pham, and Chris Soentpiet. Each of these talented illustrators has found a unique way to interpret the values and beliefs that have built our great country.

Through moving illustrations, AMERICA THE BEAUTIFUL integrates the lyrics of the familiar patriotic tune with inspiring presidential quotations. AMERICA THE BEAUTIFUL will help teach children about our country's great leaders while highlighting American values such as diversity, unity, and freedom. In addition, the back cover features a quote from the acceptance speech of the winner of the 2012 presidential election.

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Little Owl's Night - Divya Srinivasan

Illustrated by the author
2011, Viking
HC $16.99
Goodreads rating:  3.77
My rating:  5 - I really loved it
32 pages

Endpapers:  Both are different - FRONT:  raccoon and squirrel in tree, huge black sky, BACK: raccoon sleeping and squirrel gathering acorns, both at the base of the tree, daytime.
1st Line/s (Actually, 1st three double-page spreads):  "Little Owl was having a wonderful night./He watched the funny possum family waddle along in a neat row./By the river, beavers gnawed at trees.  turtle hid in her shell as fireflies danced all around."
Illustrations:  Dark black sky - paper cuts and paint? - hard to say.  I really love 'em...it was the cover illustration that forced me to pick ut up in the first place.
Illustrator:  www.pupae.com . This is her first book.  She loves nighttime and lives in Austin, Texas.

I was just going o take a quick flip through this book to peek at it, but slowed down to admire the illustrations.  Then I went back to read it and discovered some beautiful language.  Font is white on black (which I love).


Tuesday, July 24, 2012

POETRY - Holiday Stew – Jenny Whitehead


A Kid’s Portion of Holiday and Seasonal Poems
Illustrated by the author
2007, Henry Holt & Co.
64 pgs.
HC $17.95
I love the poems and I love the illustrations, so I’m rating 5 stars!

Endpapers:  RED
Title Page:  Hand-lettered and illustrated with pictures similar to the rest of the book…funny and clever!
Illustrations: colorful, busy, everywhere, almost-journally, just the kind of illustrations of love and wish I could do…Drawn with black pen lines and colored with gouache.

The book is divided into four sections – by season, and just about every holiday you could ever imagine is covered.  Cleverly. And there are more than just “holiday” poems…there are birthday, breaking the turkey wishbone, spring cleaning, mother Earth, Arbor Day, friendship day…you get it!
    
If I Could Paint a Springtime Day

If I could paint a springtime day,
I’d dip my brush in rain,
And splatter pink the popcorn trees
That bloom along the lane.

I’d mix a shade of purple
Chilled from one last winter snow,
To decorate the crocuses;
Brave soldiers in a row.

And when the sun peeks out,
I’d catch some yellow in my hand,
And finger-paint forsythia
To wake the dreary land.

And then I’d borrow emerald green
From seedlings breaking through,
And paint a thousand blades of grass
To hold the summer’s dew.

Last, I’d tint the tulips
Gently waking in their bed,
And welcome home the robin ---
Painted breast, a splendid red.

April Fool’s Day 

A trick by a friend,
a prank by a brother
pales dearly compared
to one planned by your mother.

She’s plotted all year
while she scraped, scoured, and scrubbed
your grass stains, your grease stains,
your grimy-ringed tub.

She may try to set
your alarm clock ahead,
so you’re washed and dressed
while the world’s still in bed.

Or lovingly make
your ham sandwich for school
with paper, not cheese,
that reads “April Fools!”

But lucky for us
on this one single day,
a trick on your mother
is also okay.

So, no one will blame you---
it won’t be your fault.
The sugar-bowl sugar’s not sugar---
it’s SALT!

It’s Labor Day

A holiday for hard work?
Yes, grown-ups, you deserve it!
But thank you very kindly
For letting kids observe it.

Our school year’s just beginning,
All summer we’ve slept late.
The only job we worked at
Was playing three months straight!

So, to make it fair for  you,
We’ll work on Labor Day,
Our job?  To let you sleep in,
And then make sure you play!

Send Up Some Gratitude

In a time when we all want
A little more-more-more,
Stop and think-think-think
Of all you’re thankful for.
Your mom, your dad---
Can you think of any others?
It’s okay if you say
Your sisters or your brothers.
Good friends, good health,
Good luck, good food---
For the good in your life,
Send up some gratitude.
For a roof where you live,
For your dog, fish, or bird,
Make your thank-thank-thank-you
On Thanksgiving Day be heard!

Winter in the South (by a kid from the North)

How do you make a snowman
When there isn’t any snow?
How do you have a snowball fight
When it melts before you throw?
How do you make snow angels
With green grass on the ground?
You can’t You’re far too busy eating
Ice cream all year round!

Celebrating Chinese New Year

Red lai see for the children,
Red banners for the walls,
Happy red is everywhere
When Chinese New Year calls.

Gold oranges for giving,
Peach blossoms to bring luck,
White shark fins for special soup,
Pink sweet sauce for the duck.

Hot yellow lions dancing,
Warm yellow lantern light,
Pink-yellow-red-green dragons
Who snarl but never bite!

Brown sticky cake and dumplings,
One great big black bass fish,
A Gung Hay Fat Choy! greeting;
To all---our New Year wish!

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Little Blue Truck Leads the Way - Alice Schertle

Illustrated by Jill McElmurry
Harcourt Children's, 2009
$16.00
40 pages
Rating: 5
Endpapers: rust

This book really works for me. Visually, I love it. Great size - perhaps 10 x 8. Color tones that really appeal, not too bright, not too washed out. Illustrations completely cover the page - the text is incorporated really nicely into the illustrations. The vehicles themselves have great personality. There are different views of the city from above, from WAY above, from the road, eye-to-eye. The city is depicted the way that I think of it - this could be Boston or New York...

The story is of a little blue pickup; small, old, and out-of-place in the hustle and bustle of the big city. When the pushy limousine that's driving the mayor breaks down, the little blue pickup gives him a lift. And then he teaches the push and shove, me-first crowd to chill out, be thoughtful, and enjoy life a little. At least this is my take. I liked it a great deal, on many levels.

It looks like there's another book about Blue that's already come out - Little Blue Truck. Gonna have to find it!

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Yum! MmMm! Que Rico! - Pat Mora

Poetry
America's Sproutings
Illustrated by Rafael Lopez
Lee & Low Books, 2007
$16.95
32 pages
Love the Illustrations.
Love the Interesting paragraph for each haiku.
Not crazy about some of the haiku.
Endpapers: Pumpkin orange

Discover the foods NATIVE to North and South America. There might even be a few surprises! A really informative, interesting, well-researched paragraph about each individual food sits in the left edge of the left page (black font on a rich orange...yellow....green....), a haiku about the same food sits on the right page. Illustrations are gorgeous - bold, bright, no white (the originals are acrylic on wood). Love 'em.

Blueberry --- Chili --- Chocolate --- Corn --- Cranberry --- Papaya --- Peanut --- Pecan --- Pineapple --- Potato --- Prickly Pear --- Pumpkin (look at all the P's!) --- Tomato --- Vanilla

CHOCOLATE

Fudge, cake, pie, cookies.
Brown magic melts on your tongue.
Happy, your eyes dance.

I teach haiku each year. It's great for figuring out syllables, stresses, rhythm. I always encourage the kids to get rid of any non-essential words by putting in a snazzier one. Also encouraged is adding a word to make sure that it paints the picture it needs to paint. We really work on having them make total sense. Some of the haikus in this book leave out words to the point that they don't really paint the picture they need to paint. Others will disagree, I'm sure.
Don't get me wrong - it's a great book. I'm just not crazy about some of the haikus.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Glass Slipper, Gold Sandal - Paul Fleischman

A Worldwide Cinderella
Illustrated by Julie Paschkis
Henry Holt & Co., 2007
$16.95
32 pgs.
Rating: 4,5
Endpapers: Aqua & avacodo world map showing 17 locations that are included in the story - bordered
Author's Note

I'm quite enamored of Paul Fleischman's work (I'm trying to forget that he wrote The Dunderheads), and this beautiful Cinderella does not disappoint. One of the reasons I love Fleischman's writing so much is that you never know exactly what to expect - he always has a clever take on things. Well, this Cinderella draws from 17 different countrys' adaptations of the story. So you'll be reading along, and get a page split into halves, or thirds, or quarters: And on the girl's feet appeared a pair of glass slippers (France)...diamond anklets (India)...sandals of gold (Iraq)....

The colors! The artwork! The book design! All my favorites are included, which make the visual enjoyment of this story even more wonderful. The fairly small amount of text is written in small white boxes that are framed by batik-looking backgrounds. Paschis uses designs and motifs from each of the various cultures that she's depicting. The illustration for each is placed in a rectangle above the text, and she includes as much information from the country as possible. The only thing that never changes is Cinderella's face.

Clever. Visual. A wonderful Cinderella. Read it after you've shared a few of the many, many available that tell the story from another culture's point of view.

Friday, October 30, 2009

When the Moon Is Full - Penny Pollock

Poetry
A Lunar Year
Illustrated by Mary Azarian
Little, Brown & Co. 2001
32 pages
for: everyone (though written for kids)
Rating: 5
Endpapers: Red

There are 13 poems in this book, one that introduces full moons, then one for each month. At the end are questions and answers about the moon that gives good, simple information for young kids. (Do you know what a blue moon is? It happens every two years and nine months - it is the second full moon in one month or the fourth in a season. Cool, huh?)

Mary Azarian's illustrastions are hand-colored wood prints. Gorgeous. Whether it be summer or winter, animal or moon, she gets it right. Use this with a study of the moon, poetry, seasons, great words, or beautiful art. Mmmm.

April
The Frog Moon

Frogs sit in the marshes,
throats bellowed tight,
feeling quite romantic,
calling through the night.
Come my love, my love, my love.
Come be mine tonight.

November
The Beaver Moon

Black and icy pond
mirrors moon so round,
while hidden in the beavers’ lodge
coziness abounds.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

A Gift for Abuelita - Nancy Luenn

Celebrating the Day of the Dead
(Un regalo para Abuelita En celebracion del Dia de los Muertos)
Illustrated by Robert Chapman
Rising Moon, 1998
32 Pages
Rating: 4/5 Illustrations
Endpapers: The cemetery, close up

Oh, the illustrations in this book! So different! I tried to guess how they were made before finding out. Thoughtfully - and thankfully - Mr. Chapman gave an excellent description of his process: CAST PAPER. He creates a mold using a wooden frame where he forms the picture in many layers using wood, cardboards, and heavy papers. He then creates the page by applying a thin layer of wet paper pulp. When dry and uncast, he paints and adds thread, twine, beads, etc. I would LOVE to see (and touch...) the actual work!

The story, told in English and Spanish, is the personal story of a young girl whose beloved abuelita (grandmother) has recently died. We hear of the offerings (ofrenda) that her family is making for previously deceased loved ones for the Day of the Dead. We're with them when they clean the graves and picnic at the cemetery. And we share Rosita's joy when she finally feels her abuelita's presence.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Butterfly Eyes and Other Secrets of the Meadow - Joyce Sidman

Poetry
Illustrated by Beth Krommes
Houghton Mifflin, 2006
$16.00
40 pgs.
For: Middle Grades
Rating: 4.5
Endpapers: INCREDIBLE scratchboard meadow closeup

Wow wow wow wow wow, this eye-popping art blows me away. It's scratchboard, and it's really something. The cover just doesn't do it justice.

Two page spreads with two poems are followed by two pages that describe what's going on in the previous pages. Dew and grasshopper, Rabbit and fox, Spittlebug and Xylem & Phloem (I've seen all the bubbles on a weed-type plant, this tells you about it!), Milkweed and butterflies, Snake and toad, Goldfinch and hawk, Deer and trees......coordinated pairings with beautiful poetry, lovely descriptions, and artwork that is spectacular.

In the Almost Light

In the dark,
in the night,
in the almost-light,
in the leaf-crisp air just before sunlight,
sprouts a secret, silent, sparkling sight:
berries grown on the vines of night.

On the grass,
on the buds,
on the bark of trees,
on the small clear wings of the bumblebees,
on the spiderwebs (and the spiders’ knees),
come the jewels of the dawn
in the cool night’s breeze

And the sun
when it comes
through the purple haze
touches each clear gem with its sidelong gaze,
fingers each clear drop with its lazy rays,
gathers each one back for the summer days.

What is it?

Monday, July 6, 2009

Magic Box - Katie Cleminson

Published: 2009
for: Ages 3-7
Hyperion Books for Children
Rating: 4
$15.99
Endpapers: Blue and red splatters washed across the top of page, musical score with rabbits instead of notes across the bottom.

This UK artist has created a simple story of an imaginative young girl. It's the glorious illustrations that I loved about this book. It's mostly black and white, with the exception of faint red shadings on Eva's shirt -- and bold splotches and droplets of oranges, reds, and blues sweeping across the background of each page.

For her birthday, Eva receives a box that contains Monty, a big white bear. But abracadabra, with a flick of a wand she creates floating rabbits, delicious food, and magical music to dance to.

Great fun!

Saturday, May 2, 2009

All in a Day - Cynthia Rylant

Illustrated by Nikki McClure (with unbelievable paper cuts)
2009
$17.95
Rating: 4 (A hard book to rate. Does it work as a book? It works as a poem, and the illustrations are A+, but will it appeal to a child?)

Ten years ago, when traveling south from Maine, I routed us through West Virginia so that I could see where Cynthia Rylant "came from." Well, we went in the middle of July when everything is green and beautiful, and, as a tourist, I saw mainly touristy things - but I now love West Virginia. I've been back twice, and would love to go again. I really loved Cynthia Rylant's words. I loved her poetry and stories for young adults. Since then she's written many verses and stories that have become picture books, and I haven't been quite as excited over many of them as her previous/first work. I read them all, though!

This simple poem says so much. The illustations look so simple, but, oh my! They are paper cuts! ! ! Simply amazing. Alternating double page spreads of pale blue, black and white, with bright yellow, black, and white, are STUNNING. How can anoyone do this?

So many wasy to incorporate this into my classroom next year! I think I'll read the poem as a poem, without the illustrations. Then I'll show them the illustrations. Then I think we'll divide the poem into the number of kids in the class, with each designing their own class. Paper cuts will be encourage, or a mixture of papers cuts with other media - water color, particularly.

It would also make a wonderful whole-group activity as one of the sessions for our school's annual Passport to Peace!

A day is a perfect piece of time
to live a life,
to plant a seed,
to watch the sun go by.
A day starts early,
work to do,
beneath a brand-new sky.
A day brings hope
and kindness, too...
a day is all its own.
You can make a wish,
and start again,
you can find your way back home.
Every bird and every tree
and every living thing
loves the promise in a day,
loves what it can bring. (Gorgeous page!)
There is a faith in morningtime,
there is belief in noon.
Evening will come whispering
and shine a bright round moon.
A day can change just everything,
given half a chance.
Rain could show up at our door
and teach you how to dance.
The past is sailing off to sea,
the future's fast asleep.
A day is all you have to be,
it's all you get to keep.
Underneath that great big sky
the earth is all a-spin.
This day will soon e over
and it won't come back again.
So live it well, make it count,
fill it up with you.
The day's all yours, its waiting now...
See what you can do.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Wangari's Trees of Peace - Jeanette Winter

2008
Rating: 5
$17.00

Jeanette Winter''s recognizable artwork, framed by her signature rich color to the edge of tghe page is in itself a great reason to read this book. But the story --- and the way she tells it --- are both rich in language and information.

When Wangari returns from six years of schooling in America, she realizes that a huge amount of Kenya's trees have been cut down. She starts by planting and nurturing nine seedlings. And then she begins to give them away to the village women to grow, care for, and protect. "The women spread out over their village, planting tiny trees in long rows, like a green belt stretching over the land." She protects old growth threes and is even arrested. But she does not give up. "The umbrella of trees returns."

Read the text.

Excellent author's note. Wangari won the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize and is now a member of the Kenyan Parliament! Wonderful storytelling.