Neighbor
Tuesday, January 3, 2023
Neighbor by Jack Merrill (for Ashley Bryan)
Neighbor
Saturday, February 5, 2022
In Memory of Ashley Bryan
July 13, 1923 - February 4, 2022
Bangor Daily News obituary
The Greater Sum of Parts
The thing about Ashley Bryan
isn't that he is
painter and poet
storyteller and scholar
philosopher and veteran
brother and son;
nor is it
his collection of
songs and sea glass
driftwood and bones,
memories of love
dressed in crepe paper flowers.
The thing about Ashley Bryan
is that
when he takes your hand
all those pieces come together
like a found art puppet
like cut-paper collage
like a thing called
grace.
Julia Durango
from Dare to Dream...Change the World
edited by Jill Corcoran
Sunday, November 10, 2019
Picture Book - Blooming Beneath the Sun
Endpapers: orange with cut paper daisies (like the daisies that accompany "Where Innocent Bright-Eyed Daisies Are."
The world changes so quickly, but the joy and fun of being a child always remains. Christina Rossetti’s classic nursery rhymes have embodied the simple essence of childhood for centuries, and now award-winning illustrator Ashley Bryan brings new life to them with this wonderfully illustrated selection of Rossetti’s poetry.
Bryan’s bright and intricate collage art perfectly complement Rossetti’s simple text, and together they create a vibrant book for both kids—and kids at heart.
Who Has Seen the Wind?
Who has seen the wind?
Neither I nor you;
But when the leaves hang trembling,
The wind is passing through.
Who has seen the wind?
Neither you nor I:
But when the trees bow down their heads
The wind is passing by.
Hurt No Living Thing
Hurt No living Thing
Ladybird, not butterfly
Nor moth with dusty wing,
nor cricket chirping cheerily
Nor grasshopper so light of leap,
Nor dancing gnat, nor beetle fat,
Nor harmless worms that creep.
Where Innocent Bright-Eyed Daisies Are
Where innocent bright-eyed daisies are,
With blades of grass between,
Each daisy stands up like a star
Out of a sky of green.
Sunday, January 13, 2019
PICTURE BOOK - Freedom Over Me by Ashley Bryan
48 pgs.
I mourn the passing of
my husband, Cado Fairchilds.
He managed our estate alone.
Eleven Negro slaves,
they carried out the work
that made our estate prosper.
He never hired an overseer."
Coretta Scott King Author Honor Book
Coretta Scott King Illustrator Honor Book
Using original slave auction and plantation estate documents, Ashley Bryan offers a moving and powerful picture book that contrasts the monetary value of a slave with the priceless value of life experiences and dreams that a slave owner could never take away.
Imagine being looked up and down and being valued as less than chair. Less than an ox. Less than a dress. Maybe about the same as…a lantern.
You, an object. An object to sell.
In his gentle yet deeply powerful way, Ashley Bryan goes to the heart of how a slave is given a monetary value by the slave owner, tempering this with the one thing that CAN’T be bought or sold—dreams. Inspired by the actual will of a plantation owner that lists the worth of each and every one of his “workers”, Bryan has created collages around that document, and others like it. Through fierce paintings and expansive poetry he imagines and interprets each person’s life on the plantation, as well as the life their owner knew nothing about—their dreams and pride in knowing that they were worth far more than an Overseer or Madam ever would guess. Visually epic, and never before done, this stunning picture book is unlike anything you’ve seen.
Saturday, October 26, 2013
POETRY PICTURE BOOK: Dare to Dream...Change the World - Jill Corcoran
People included: Sylvia Mendez (discrimination against Mexicans in American schools), Nicholas Cobb (a kids helping homeless people in a big way), Father Gregory Boyle (humanitarian working with LA gangs), Anne Frank, Jonas Salk, Jean-Michel Basquiat (contemporary artist who died young), Michelle Kwan (most decorated female ice skater in American history), ASHLEY BRYAN (see separate blog), Temple Grandin (autistic cattle rancher), Martha Graham, GEORGIA O'KEEFFE, Christa McAuliffe, Steven Spielberg, and last but not least, Chad Hurley, Steve Chen, and Jawed Karim (YouTube founders)
Poets included: Jill Corcoran, J. Patrick Lewis, Alice Schertle, David L. Harrison, Jane Yolen, Joan Bransfield Graham, Ellen Hopkins, Georgia Heard, Hope Anita Smith, Elaine Magliaro, Janet S. Wong, Curtis Crisler, Denise Lewis Patrick, Joyce Lee Wong, Jacqui Robbins, Julia Durango, Tracie Vaughn Zimmer, Lisa Wheeler, Hope Vestergaard, Carol M. Tanzman, Stephanie Hemphill, Lee Bennett Hopkins, Rebecca Kai Dotlich, Joyce Sidman, Marilyn Singer, Rose Horowitz, Alan Katz, Kelly Ramsdell Fineman, Laura Purdie Salas, and Bruce Coville. WOW!
This book has a great rating. It's an amazingly wonderful book. To even borrow it from a library (there were none in any of the Tucson, Arizona branches), they were able to obtain it from interlibrary loan from....Geneva, Illinois! What's going on? Why is a special book like this so difficult to find?
Goodreads Review:
Nicholas Cobb
Four-year-old Nicholas Cobb
saw people living under a bridge, asked
why,
Asking still as years passed,
Boy Scout Cobb decided to do...
something...
make a difference.
Fifty-four kids at City House
needed more than shelter.
They needed hope, a way to cope,
a gift of love,
a warm coat.
That was something.
Nicholas asked friends to give,
left jars in barbershops,
made a website - Comfort and Joy,
did what he could
and
money came in.
Ten years from the bridge,
Eagle Scout Cobb,
doing what he could,
bought fifty-four coats
By learning what it means
to ask not why
but how
to make
a difference.
David L. Harrison
Some pages have two poems about the same person linked --
This Moment
The Frank Family - Monday 7:30 am July 6, 1942
Stepping over puddles on Prinsengracht Street,
shoes soaked, heavy rucksacks on their backs,
coats, caps and scarves although it's warm July;
silence between them.
Anne wonders how others on the street
can act like it's a normal day;
no knots in their stomachs, no legs trembling with fear,
At her father's office building, a spice warehouse,
they open the door - sweet cinnamon fills the air.
Now it's quiet. Office workers haven't yet arrived.
They climb the narrow staircase to the small rooms
in the back of the secret annex
where this moment turns into days
into weeks and months
into two years hiding - waiting.
Eerily ordinary days -
Westertoren church clock chiming every half hour,
playing Monopoly with Peter,
cooking supper,
eating split-pea soup and potatoes with dumplings
washing up
listening to the radio at night for news of the war
like any family.
While in hiding Anne writes to Kitty.
Her words thread through
her dreams;
and later
ours -
threat through every moment -
ever after.
Georgia Heard
Faith of a Mustard Seed
In the attic, everything happens on a piece of paper: happiness, disappointment, fear,
Spite. I can laugh out loud. Shout. Make my voice heard. Tell
Of my love for a complicated boy.
Everything is documented.
I let my pen whisper my secrets into the ear of the page.
Still, I wish my dear Kitty could hear them first hand. I allow myself to
Believe that one day Peter and I will share a life together. That the
People we love will eat Shabbat dinner at our table. That we
Are only here until the world rights itself.
Basically, when someone soothes the beast.
Good always prevails. Doesn't it?
At least that's what I believe in my
Heart of hearts.
Hope Anita Smith
Painter
"Where I was born and where and how I lived is unimportant. It is what I have done with where I have been that should be of interest." ~Georgia O'Keeffe
Sky will always be.
So shall I.
Feel my sudden thrill
as I stand atop
a beloved red hill.
Hear my silent voice rush
from Charcoal, paint, a well-used brush
as I speak with hues --
vibrant violet, a grandeur of green -
bringing to life what I have seen.
Sense my strength
of a gigantic flower,
dry, desolate desert sands
I hard-studied hour after patient hour.
View my
ancient skulls of deer,
horse,
dried up ram ---
then you'll know just who I am.
Yes.
Sky will always be.
So shall I.
So shall I.
Lee Bennett Hopkins
Ripples
No one acts in isolation
And no act leaves the world the same.
Words and gestures ripple outward,
What shores they reach we cannot name.
All our lives end in a riddle --
A mystery without an answer,
For even gone we ripple on,
Like a dance without the dancer.
Did you extend a friendly hand?
Did you lift a battered spirit?
The one you helped helped someone else
Ah! Now we're getting near it.
That second someone dropped despair
Did not give in, instead revived
To teach, to love, to fight, to dare,
And what you've done lived on, survived.
On and out the circle widens,
Past all hope of comprehending.
The slightest touch can change the world
Healing, helping, lifting, mending,
Actions last for generations
Our fathers' mothers mold our hearts.
We in turn shape all that follows;
Each time we act, a ripple starts.
Bruce Coville
Thursday, October 24, 2013
Ashley Bryan: Painter, Poet, PERSON Extraordinaire
The Greater Sum of Parts
The thing about Ashley Bryan
isn't that he is
painter and poet
storyteller and scholar
philosopher and veteran
brother and son;
nor is it
his collection of
songs and sea glass
driftwood and bones,
memories of love
dressed in crepe paper flowers.
The thing about Ashley Bryan
is that
when he takes your hand
all those pieces come together
like a found art puppet
like cut-paper collage
like a thing called
grace.
Julia Durango
from Dare to Dream...Change the World
edited by Jill Corcoran
Books I've "reviewed" on this blog:
Anthologies or other books that include Ashley's work:
The Bill Martin, Jr. Big Book of Poetry (Martin)
Dare to Dream...Change the World (Corcoran)
My America (Gilchrist)
Sky Magic (Hopkins)
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Sky Magic - Lee Bennett Hopkins
Illustrated by Mariusz Stawarski
Dutton Children's/Penguin
$17.99
March, 2009
Rating: 4
Endpapers: Bright orange to pale orange, fading (top to bottom)
14 poems about the sun, moon, and stars - including Schertle, Dotlich, Heard, McCord, and Sandburg.
The illustrations, by polish artist Stawarski, are bright, dark colors, with a decidedly geometric feel, color everywhere...the only white is the font!
Sun
Soleiel!
I’m your star
center stage
the poem on your page
beauty
power
the beat ablaze
I amaze
I am the candle on your cake
a sparkler burning bright
I am light
splendor
bliss
at dawn, your kiss
tenderly,
I come to you
a diamond
on the morning dew
I am the wonder of all sky
I am the twinkle in your eye.
Lyn Littlefield Hoopes
Song
Sing to the sun
It will listen
And warm your words
Your joy will rise
Like the sun
And glow
Within you
Sing to the moon
It will hear
And soothe your cares
Your fears will set
Like the moon
And fade
Within you.
Ashley Bryan
Monday, March 16, 2009
The Bill Martin Jr. Big Book of Poetry
Illustrators: Ashley Bryan, Aliki, Robert Quakenbush, Lois Ehlert, Stephen Kellogg, Chris Raschka, Henry Cole, Paul Meisel, Nancy Tafuri, Derek Anderson, Laura Logan
Published: 2008
Rating: 5
Endpapers: Bright Aqua
$21.00
The first two page spread is "Something Told the Wild Geese" by Rachel Field and illustrated by Ashley Bryan. You just can't beat that for your first eyefull!
A classic anthology of some of my favorite poems and poets, this incredible volume has 200+ great poems by leading children's poets AND illustrators from the very top of the field of children's literature. It inclues the illustrations of Ashley Bryan ( ! ! !) and an illustrator that I'm going to have to research a bit, she's new to me and I really enjoyed her work in this anthology, Laura Logan.
Then next 30% off coupon and I buy this!
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
My America - Jan Spivey Gilchrist
For: Kids
Pub: 2007
Rating: 4/5
Reread: Aug. 12, 2008
Signed by both Bryan and Gilchrist
Okay, anything by Ashley Bryan drives me wild. I love his work and I love him. This collaboration is quite beautiful, whether you're an Ashley fan or not. Gilchrist's simple 13-line poem is illustrated alternately by the two illustrators. Gilchrist's watercolors depict a thoughtful, introspective translation of the poem and Bryan's amazing colors shout out the "big picture" of what the poem is saying.
MY AMERICA
Have you seen my counry?
Seen my magic skies?
Seen my mighty waters?
Have you seen my land?
Have you seen my counry?
Seen my wings abound?
Seen my water creatures?
Seen my beasts and fowl?
Have you seen my people?
We hail from every shore.
Have you seen my homeland?
Have you seen my country?
Have you seen my AMERICA?
Just to get my middle school students revved up for the new year, I'm going to share this poem. I'll read it to them, I'll pass out copies, I'll have them read it to each other and to the class. Then I'll share the book and get reactions. Perhaps they'll each create an illustration themselves. Perhaps they'll each add another verse. We'll see where it goes. Reading. Writing. Listening. Speaking. AND fantastic art!
(I love the saguaro cactus on the cover. When Ashley visited Tucson a few years ago, I got to drive him around a bit and share this beautiful landscape, so different from Maine's!)