All Categories
Get it between 2024-12-03 to 2024-12-10. Additional 3 business days for provincial shipping.
Product Description "Some children’s books feel like classics the first time one encounters them. It’s not hard to imagine young poets embracing The Wordy Book as warmly as new generations keep embracing The Little Prince.” ―Naomi Shihab Nye, for the New York TimesA Publishers Weekly High-Concept Picture Book for ChildrenSelected for 2021 Society of Illustrators Original Art ExhibitionThis book is a collection of paintings made up of words upon words, all moving, interacting, and creating a visually stunning and wordy universe. Each page contains a question to be answered with the words that lie within. What happens when words and pictures coexist in such a way, bump into one another, are in constant conversation? How might words paint a bird, while that very bird sings the words themselves? This book invites readers to participate in a vibrant celebration of language itself. From School Library Journal K-Gr 3-With tree trunks whose bark is layer on layer of sinewy words, with landscapes that curve and coax along with playful energy about sounds and meanings, and with a sensibility that is part New Age and all childlike, Paschkis winds her way through paintings that ask questions and questions that point to many answers. The art is folkloric, with colorful birds, animals, and people, but also surreal in the compositions, which provide readers with plenty to consider: "Can I hold a castle in my hand?" appears next to a teapot; set inside the teapot is an elephant, ridden by a person balancing a castle. Parrots as symmetrical as a playing card ask, "Can you repeat that?" with the word repeat shown again, this time upside-down, within the text. VERDICT As with Eden Cooper's Remember the Night Rainbow, this book asks a lot but has perfect appeal for the dreamy child who loves to be immersed in both words and pictures.-Kimberly Olson Fakih, School Library Journalα(c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. Review A Publishers Weekly High-Concept Picture Book for ChildrenSelected for 2021 Society of Illustrators Original Art Exhibition“Some children’s books feel like classics the first time one encounters them. ‘What does a word think about?’ the artist and writer Julie Paschkis asks on the first double-page spread of The Wordy Book. This and other evocative questions… punctuate a dazzling array of richly colored, riveting paintings. Folkloric and elegant, this book invites slow, meditative drifting. Paschkis is the illustrator of more than 25 children’s books, and her poetic sensibility girds every page. Absorbing layers of waves, leaves and petals, boats, birds and people, all threaded with words, sustain the magic of her visual language. The whole head full of ‘maybe,’ with the word ‘yes’ repeating inside a smaller head, is a miracle of whimsy and wonder. An engaging author’s note reminds us that ‘a word can be savored for its sound and shape as well as for its meaning’ and that ‘the meaning can be fluid.’ It’s not hard to imagine young poets embracing The Wordy Book as warmly as new generations keep embracing The Little Prince.“ —New York Times★ "Talk about painting with words. Author/illustrator Paschkis plays with them, too, and encourages readers to do likewise. In the process, she explores the elasticity and seemingly endless possibilities of language. The vividly colored, wittily detailed, folk-style paintings on double-page spreads organically incorporate words into the artwork in wondrous, creative ways. Words frequently repeat in different sizes and colors; illustrated images include words that sound or are shaped like them, are variations of them, rhyme or nearly rhyme with them, sort of resemble them, are sort of spelled like them, etc. A bouquet of flowers in a vase sports roses exuding the scents of slumber, sultry, shush, and other evocative words beginning with S; on a daisy’s petals readers find dizzy, doozy, lazy,