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The Tale of the Mandarin Duck: A Modern Fable

Product ID : 45519166


Galleon Product ID 45519166
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About The Tale Of The Mandarin Duck: A Modern Fable

Product Description NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • Inspired by the real-life rainbow-colored Mandarin Duck who appeared in New York’s Central Park in 2018, this modern fable by Bette Midler celebrates the connections people make with each other and the world around them.    How do you get people to appreciate what is right in front of them? In The Tale of the Mandarin Duck, it takes a mysterious, beautiful duck and a clear-eyed kid to point out the obvious! Bette Midler’s distinctive voice joins striking photos of the real duck by Michiko Kakutani and charming black-and-white drawings by Joana Avillez. This book will have readers of all ages coming back to visit the fantastical interpretation of New York City and its odd ducks—both feathered and human.     An afterword by Ms. Kakutani adds details to the facts behind this one-of-a-kind story of the Mandarin Duck. From School Library Journal Gr 3-5-Not to be confused with Katharine Paterson's multiple award-winning The Tale of the Mandarin Ducks, illustrated by Leo and Diane Dillon, this self-conscious "modern fable" swaddles an actual bird's 2018 visit to New York City in thick layers of wishful thinking. Once, Midler writes, New Yorkers were lively folk who "looked each other in the eye, and pretty much liked what they saw." Then the advent of smartphones put an end to all the personal interaction-until, that is, the public furor created by an exotic duck's brief stay in Central Park taught people to use their eyes again to see "that all around them are rare and beautiful birds, with and without feathers." The illustrations, in which Kakutani's sharp color photos of the gorgeously hued duck and aerial duck's-eye views of Manhattan alternate with Avillez's monochrome ink and wash galleries of busy, diverse humans adorned in similarly stylish garb, will be more of a draw to younger readers than the affected story or the celebrity names on the cover. Regardless, the photographer's afterword, which is archly entitled "Why a Duck?" and includes a reference to a scene in The Sopranos, points directly to adults as the intended audience. VERDICT An additional purchase, at best; the authorial dedication says it all: "For the birds."-John Peters, Children's Literature Consultant, New Yorkα(c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. Review “ Midler has crafted a loving ode to the people of New York…. A celebration of beauty—in a city, in its people, and in an extraordinary avian visitor.” – Kirkus Reviews, starred review “This story is rooted in reality yet slyly surreal…. There is a crackling creative synergy among the book’s collaborators, each of whom contributes bountifully to the storytelling.” – Publishers Weekly, starred review About the Author Bette Midler is an American actress, singer, and comedienne. She remembers the time before cell phones. Visit her on Twitter and Instagram.   Michiko Kakutani is a Pulitzer Prize–winning literary critic and the former chief book critic of The New York Times. She is the author of the New York Times bestseller The Death of Truth.   Joana Avillez is an illustrator from New York City, where she still lives and works. Her clients include Apartamento, Gucci, Hermès, the Museum of Modern Art, The New Yorker, New York Magazine, The New York Times, The Paris Review, Penguin Random House, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Vogue, Zeit Magazine, and more.