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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Rick Allen, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Best Non-Fiction Picture Books of 2014

The best non-fiction picture books of 2014, as picked by the editors and contributors of The Children’s Book Review.

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2. Winter Bees and Other Poems of the Cold

sidman winter bees 300x259 Winter Bees and Other Poems of the ColdBaby, it’s cold outside. Time to look at this very wintry book.

Taking it from the top…

We notice the arresting cover: the leaping fox; the contrast between the fox’s red coat /dark paws and the white, snowy background; the overlay of snow in the air.

Open the book to see endpapers the color of a winter twilight.

Right off the bat there’s an attempt to involve the audience, visually: that fox on the cover (what is it about to pounce on, we wonder); the moose looking straight at us from out of the title page; even the vole on the front flap seems to be looking at us. (I imagine this was a calculated decision, given the nature of the subject: winter being the least active season of the year. All this pulls the audience in before the majestic double-page spreads begin.)

Immediately we notice the sense of texture on the page; the overlay of falling or swirling or even just imminent snow. You can almost breathe this book; you can feel the frozen air in your lungs. There’s a lot of accomplishment on evidence in this book, but the palpable air in this book may be its most remarkable quality.

Then we are presented with one double-page spread after another of majestically composed winter scenes featuring a range of animals, large and small. We notice the care taken to present scenes from an animal’s-eye view, the arresting perspectives, the palette that somehow communicates the sense of cold and yet uses warm colors in spots — and sometimes more than that. Particularly the orange-red of the fox, the bees’ hive, the beavers’ lodge, the chickadees’ breasts. (The cover -and title-page type presages this constant contrast between cold and warm, with the word winter in a chilly blue-purple and the word bees in that orange-red.)

My favorite two spreads in the book, however, feature no animals at all. (I will not be able to be eloquent enough about them, so be sure to take a look for yourself.) A closeup of a single branch opens the book (coming directly after the title page and before the table of contents). On the left hand page, we see the branch as it would look in autumn; as our eye travels toward the right, that same branch gradually morphs into what it would look like in winter. At book’s close (just before the final glossary page), the left-hand page shows the branch in winter, and now as our eyes move to the right, the branch morphs into spring, with the snow disappearing and small buds beginning to appear. And on the tip of the branch? Green. A bud just flowering into leaf. Taken together, those two spreads are the most elegant depiction of the changing seasons I think I’ve ever seen.

About his process for creating the illustrations for Winter Bees, Rick Allen writes (on the copyright page): “The images for this book were made through the unlikely marriage of some very old and almost new art mediums. The individual elements of each picture (the animals, trees, snowflakes, etc.) were cut, inked, and printed from linoleum blocks (nearly two hundred of them), and then hand-colored. Those prints were then digitally scanned, composed, and layered to create the illustrations for the poems. The somewhat surprising (and oddly pleasing) result was learning that the slow and backwards art of relief printmaking could bring modern technology down to its level, making everything even more complex and time-consuming.”

Does this matter? Would a knowledge of the laboriousness and complexity of the artist’s process influence the Caldecott committee? Is the committee even allowed to take such information into consideration? or must they ignore it and simply consider the finished product?

Your thoughts are welcome.

 

 

share save 171 16 Winter Bees and Other Poems of the Cold

The post Winter Bees and Other Poems of the Cold appeared first on The Horn Book.

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3. Dark Emperor & Other Poems of the Night

By Joyce Sidman
Illustrated by Rick Allen
$16.99, 4-8, 32 pages

An award-winning poet guides us through the "dappled dark" of the night woods to where the living things are in this beautiful, evocative book.

"To all of you who crawl and creep, / who buzz and chirp and hoot and peep, / who wake at dusk and throw off sleep: / Welcome to the night," Sidman writes in her opening poem.

Sidman's verses are exhilarating, as she embraces the feel of night, and its smells and sounds, while Allen's block prints envelop us in the dark beauty of things barely seen.

Richly textured and stunning to look at, Allen's engravings show only what the waning light or moonlight affords.

In one spread, the moon illuminates the filaments of a spider web as if dusted with glitter, and in another, the bold shadows of sunset divide trees between darkness and light.

Sidman, author of the Caldecott Honor-winning Song of the Water Boatman and Other Poems, describes the night woodlands as a "wild, enchanted park" where some of most humble creatures live.

Here you learn about the woodland snail, who slides up leaves "to their dewy tips" and spins morsels "into whorls of light," and the primrose moth whose wings open into delicate pink petals in the moonlight.

Every poem feels tenderly written. In one poem a mother porcupine and her baby "mew and coo a soft duet" as the baby nurses; in another, a bat tumbles to his tree after catching his last bug, grasping the bark to snuggle in.

At times Sidman shows drama unfolding. In her title poem, "Dark Emperor," she explores what it's like to be prey and you feel her compassion for this little creature.

Over the course of the poem, a mouse tries to scramble out of view of a great horned owl and is fully aware that the owl could snatch him up if it wanted to.

As the mouse makes his way through the forest litter, he sizes up the owl. High above him, the ow

1 Comments on Dark Emperor & Other Poems of the Night, last added: 10/25/2010
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