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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: App Reviews, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 6 of 6
1. App Review: The Other Side by Mental Canvas

OtherSide

Foof!  It’s been a while since I’ve done one of these so forgive me while I stretch the old app-reviewing little gray cells for a second.

There was a time, best beloved, when I thought this little blog would do it all. V-blogging.  Podcasting.  And, yes, app reviewing.  But reviewing apps is an arduous process that takes an entirely different set of muscles than those used for book reviewing.  Still, once in a while you encounter an app that speaks to you.  Particularly if it is a very rare literary app for kids.

In the early days of apps, publishers were under the distinct impression that since they were new and cool, they’d provide a possible revenue stream.  And so, for a little while, we saw a real plethora of lovely apps based on picture books.  Freight Train by Donald Crews. How Rocket Learned to Read by Tad Hills.  Wild About Books by Judy Sierra.  That sort of thing.  It didn’t take long before simple economics made it clear that apps don’t make much in the way of moolah.  You invest a lot of money at the front end, but charge only scant amounts to the customers (I mean, seriously, who’s gonna buy a $10 app?).  Over a very long period of time an app might make back its money, but that’s always assuming you aren’t producing a bunch of them at once.

The end result of all this was that the picture book apps we’ve been seeing over more recent years have been of an artistic bent.  Rules of Summer by Shaun Tan (with music by Sxip Shirey!) or maybe The Numberlys by Bill Joyce (which is kind of a cheat to include since the app preceded the book, but you know what I mean).

Into this uncertain landscape steps Mental Canvas.  Julie Dorsey, a Professor of Computer Science at Yale University, is the Founder and CEO of this relatively new software company.  Funded by the National Science Foundation’s SBIR (Small Business Innovation Research Program), the company uses Dorsey’s visual computing specialty to develop “a new digital graphical media type that sits between a 2D drawing and a 3D model.”

product_cover_ioNOKvLCome again?  Well, honestly, the only real way to explain it is to see it.  And the book that Mental Canvas decided to use to kick off a lot of what it’s doing was, of all things, Istvan Banyai’s The Other Side.

Children’s librarians who’ve been in the business since 2005, do you remember this book?  It was one of the first I ever reviewed at old Amazon.com.  One January 23, 2006 I wrote it up (marking it as one of the last pre-blog reviews I would write) and said that, “I’m not gonna tell you that every person and child you hand this to is gonna adore it. But for pure visual adrenaline, few things will entrance and entice you better than Banyai’s remarkable effort. A book that won’t make it easy for you. Your intelligence will just have to rise to its level.”

Forgotten in the wake of Banyai’s more popular Zoom and Re-Zoom, the book finds a new life in the form of an app for kids.  And as it happens, I never would have considered it but The Other Side is rather ideal in an electronic format.

If you’re unfamiliar with the story, here’s the description I wrote of the book back in the day:

“You need to understand how to read this book before you pick it up. Fortunately, the instructions are in the title itself. Everything on one page corresponds to what happens on the next by showing the “other side”. Example: One page shows a boy in a coral colored cap peeking from an airplane window. Now turn the page and you find yourself on the other side of that window. You are now in the plane looking at the back of the boy’s head from down a row of passengers. A boy floating merrily in a swimming pool seems to be quite close to the fin of a shark. Turn the page and that shark is actually the point of his own black flipper and an underwater seascape is now the focus of your attention. The pictures are sometimes like conjurings from the mind of David Lynch. In one picture a single woman wearing a thin strapped shirt (of which Banyai has always been a big big fan) sits alone in an empty auditorium, a single spotlight on a face that peeks from the curtain. Sometimes the pictures are remarkable in their simplicity too. A yellow page with a white circle show a tiny point piercing through. Turn the page and there stands a baby chick with its beak poking into the white. Taken separately each picture is a story and a world in and of itself.”

If I can work at least one David Lynch reference into a picture book review, my job here is done.

6So how does the app work?  Simple.  The pages, for the most part, remain intact.  Unlike some apps where pages are animated or include games in their crevices, there are only two things that Mental Canvas has done to distinguish these pages.  First, they’ve rendered Banyai’s two-dimensional drawings in 3D.  Turn your iPad around and you can almost see above and behind the subjects.  Second, they’ve done a bloody good job at incorporating sound into the design.  From car engines to street noises, the inside white noise of an airplane to the sound snow makes when you compact it with your feet, the audio design is king here.  The underwater scenes alone will give swimmers a kind of sense memory little heard in app technology.

Some apps can be handed to a child while the adult walks away to, oh I dunno, cook dinner (not that I’d have any experience with that or anything).  Other apps demand parent/child interactions.  The Other Side falls squarely in the latter camp.  Like its book before it, a lot of questions need to be asked as you read through.  Where is the book going to take you next?  Did you catch the connecting picture from the previous scene?  Do you think this is what’s really on the other side of that cage?

318There’s isn’t much to it beyond the book, which is a novelty in some ways.  When apps are expected to shove in as many bells and whistles as conceivable, the idea of simply presenting a book with a limited concept is . . . well, it’s rather original.

Of the original book I pondered why it wasn’t better known, writing, “The only thing I can figure at this point is that Banyai’s style, for all the critical praise and gushing adoration it receives, doesn’t connect to children particularly well. There’s certainly plenty to confuse them here. ‘The Other Side’ hasn’t any plot, but sometimes it seems as if characters carry over from scene to scene. There are also too many danged boys wearing caps. I’m not sure if you’re supposed to infer that they are all the same boy (even though some caps are the aforementioned coral and some are a bright eye-catching red).”  I don’t know that many of my points have changed with the release of the app.  However, I do think that children that might have eschewed it for easier fare could be more inclined to delve into it more deeply with the app as an aide.  They’d be older kids, sure, but there’s nothing wrong with handing older kids wordless picture books.  Particularly when they’re brain benders like this one.

In a way, Mental Canvas is using The Other Side to draw attention to their ability to render already existing art three-dimensional.  It’s unlikely that they’ll adapt Zoom and Re-Zoom next (though clearly that would be the logical next step).  In the meantime, for folks looking for another picture book app that isn’t the same old, same old, Banyai may have your ticket.  Pick up the app and pick up the book in a local library while you’re at it.  Definitely one wild and crazy ride, no matter how many dimensions you read it in.

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2. Fusenews: Haggis and Hash Browns

Happy Labor Day!  I’ve no special post of my own but I know someone who has created the ultimate list of Labor Songs. That would be Professor Phil Nel and at this point I’ve only seen the first of three posts but it is truly fantastic.  For one thing, he includes Moxy Früvous on his round-up, and they were a band I adored back in the days of my youth.  I’d forgotten all about “I Love My Boss” until now.  Go!  Look!  It’s worth your time.

Now I’ve been amiss in not mentioning the speaking engagement I have at the upcoming Kidlitosphere Conference.  I won’t be there in person, but through the magic of technology I’ll be Skyping alongside the hugely talented Mary Ann Scheuer of Great Kid Books and the simply marvelous Paula Wiley of Pink Me.  Our topic?  Mary Ann came up with the notion of covering book app features.  What we like, what we don’t, what to look for, etc.  And if you cannot attend, we may be able to put something on our blogs afterwards.  Stay tuned or read more about the talk here.

New Blog Alert: Speaking of apps, ever wonder why there isn’t a children’s literature blog dedicated to the digital realm?  Turns out, there is and it’s called dot.Momming.  Children’s author and founder of the Hyde Park/South Side Network for SCBWI-Illinois, Kate Hannigan, provides reviews as well as multiple interviews with folks working in the field.  I’m a fan, and not least because an app I helped advise (Hildegard Sings) shows up as number one on her Top Picture Book Apps list.

I like to see good work rewarded.  And Kate Messner’s efforts to bring attention to the libraries devastated after Hurricane Irene certainly qualifies as more than simply “good”.  The fact that School Library Journal highlighted her work in the piece Author Kate Messner Helps to Rebuild Local NY Library Devastated By Hurricane Irene is just icing on the cake.  And much to my astonishment it include a photograph of a Paddington book that I apparently read as a child but had entirely forgotten about until I saw it in the article.  Wow!  It’s been a long time since that happened.

Need a good website for writing exercises?  Have you seen the delightful They Fight Crime?  Try it.  Then try again and again.  My current favorite is, “He’s a globe-trotting drug-addicted hairdresser on the edge. She’s a tortured belly-dancing vampire operating on the wrong side of the law. They fight crime!”  Hours of time wasting fun to be had there.

Every other day an adult author gets it into their head that writing for children is a snap (sometimes with horrific results).  Children’s authors rarely go the other way around.  Now Eoin Colfer has decided to change all that.  A comedic crime thriller called Plugged is 5 Comments on Fusenews: Haggis and Hash Browns, last added: 9/5/2011

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3. Fusenews: Croquet and Pentanque (together at last)

Lovegoods Fusenews: Croquet and Pentanque (together at last)Maybe half a year ago I mentioned that Ms. Lucy Knisley had created a cartoon poster for the first four Harry Potter books.  Now with the final Potter movie coming out, the posters are at long last complete.  They follow the plots of the books, not the films, but the look of the characters can be amusingly cinematic at times.  And for the record, if I were a tattoo-minded dame, I would adore getting this image of Luna Lovegood and her pop.

But that’s not really my top news story of the day.  How could it be?  No the top news story is that it is once again time for the Summer Blog Blast Tour.  Twice a year a cadre of bloggers for child and teen books gather together to interview some of the luminaries in the field.  Chasing Ray has the round-up, so seek ‘em out and read ‘em up.  I know I will.

When I lived in London for a time (it was like a little Intro to New York) I would periodically buy the newest issue of Time Out London and find interesting places to visit.  One day the mag highlighted a toy museum.  It was called The Museum of Childhood and it was fascinating.  I was too intimidated to take any pictures, though, so I sort of forgot that I even went.  Years have passed and I see that author/illustrator David Lucas has also been to that same museum and he has written about it in the post What do TOYS Think of Us? Stick around for the moment when he starts talking about panpsychism.  Looking at all those ragamuffin bits of much loved cloth and felt reminds me of my library’s own original Winnie-the-Pooh.  He is, after all, of the British persuasion.

  • Yay, Sunday Brunch!  Over at Collecting Children’s Books my partner in writing crime (we’re doing a Candlewick book with Jules from 7-Imp) has a delightful post that is well worth your time.  My favorite parts include the childhood of a future Brat Packer, a reason why Erin E. Moulton’s Flutter is unique, and a vote for “The Year’s Creepiest YA Novel.”  Hooked yet?
  • Marci, this is for you. Remember how we were trying to figure out how one would go about creating Quidditch croquet?  Well . . .
  • And since thi

    8 Comments on Fusenews: Croquet and Pentanque (together at last), last added: 7/13/2011
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4. Share a Story, Shape a Future: iPad/iPhone Apps That Promote Literacy

Share a Story, Shape a Future is a five-day online literacy event whose theme this year is "Unwrapping the Gift of Literacy." Today's topic, hosted by Danielle at There's a Book, is "Unwrapping Literacy 2.0." For my part, I'll be talking about some of the book and reading-related apps my children use and how they fit into our reading lifestyle. First, though, a little background on us. We're a

8 Comments on Share a Story, Shape a Future: iPad/iPhone Apps That Promote Literacy, last added: 3/12/2011
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5. iPad App Review: The Three Little Pigs

 Review by Johnny Boo, age 5   The Three Little Pigs App developer: Nosy Crow Price: $7.99 ($1.99 till end-of-day March 3); free lite version Requirements: Compatible with iPad (will soon be available for iPhone and iPod Touch) The Three Little Pigs is about a wolf coming in the neighborhood. The pigs were building their houses. And then the wolf couldn't blow down the brick house

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6. iPad App Review: How Rocket Learned to Read

 Review by Johnny Boo, age 5 How Rocket Learned to Read App developer: Random House Digital, Inc. Price (as of 2/23/11): $3.99 (limited-time price) Requirements: Compatible with iPad There's a little bird that startled Rocket and said, "There's no napping in class." Rocket listened to the bird read. Rocket learned to spell letters in the snow. I like to make Rocket move in the snow. The mud

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