|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
Overview"Too many of us allow our infant sons and daughters to lay about idly—napping, drinking milk and sometimes ""turning over."" Why not put them to work? Their small hands are perfect for those hard to reach plugs and caps found under car hoods. This instructional board book teaches your infant to be useful, at long last. Watch your tots enjoy the shapes and colors, all the while learning how to change oil. Fabulous!" Full Product DetailsAuthor: Lisa Brown (Author) , BrownPublisher: McSweeney's Publishing Imprint: McSweeney's Publishing Edition: Main Dimensions: Width: 12.70cm , Height: 0.90cm , Length: 11.50cm Weight: 0.086kg ISBN: 9781932416565ISBN 10: 1932416560 Pages: 12 Publication Date: 29 June 2006 Recommended Age: From 2 to 4 years Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: No Longer Our Product Availability: Awaiting stock ![]() The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you. Table of ContentsReviewsThe wordplay is delightful, and somehow, perhaps in part by embracing the restriction of using just three letters, Rosenthal conveys a message of gratitude for all the wonder that can be found if you really dig into the repetitive routines of our days. Lam s soft digital art has a retro inflection, but each page is a marvel of freewheeling graphic design, with curvy lines echoing one another and subtle patterning everywhere. Like every alphabet book, the art really matters, since what you see on the page has no organic or predictable relation to a story: You have to pause to figure out what is going on. It s fantastic that the time you spend looking at these pages is so full of enchantment. <em>The New York Times</em> Rosenthal again demonstrates her ability to use wordplay to create stories with real emotional depth as she follows children through a day, described only in three-word, A-B-C phrases... Illustrator Lam s debut couldn t be more polished and confident: her palette seems to shift with the day s waxing and waning light, while her crisp, screenprintlike images have an understated poise and precision that highlights the quiet magic of everyday moments. <em>Publishers Weekly</em> (starred review) Toronto illustrator Gracia Lam lends her artistic talent to American author Amy Krouse Rosenthal s gorgeous and whimsical picture book, which uses the first three letters of the alphabet as the jumping-off point for a series of three-word phrases describing everyday events. A birthday party scene features Lam s stylized, retro-tinged illustrations rendered in ombre pinks and purples and Rosenthal s quirky wordplay: 'Another Bright Candle, ' 'Atop Birthday Cake, ' 'Amazing Balloon Creation.' <em>Awake Beautiful Child</em> is a visual treat, and a fun twist on the alphabet book. <em>Quill & Quire</em> Beginning with a morning stretch and ending with a flick of the bedroom light switch, readers follow various children in their daily routines. The entire text is composed of three-word phrases that begin with the consecutive letters A, B, and C. Some are simple lists: Apples, Bananas, Cantaloupes at the breakfast table, or Ants, Butterflies, Caterpillars during a walk. But others are beautiful reminders ( Always Be Curious ) or silly words of wisdom ( Avoid Blinking Cheese! during a photograph). <em>Kirkus</em> Lovely. <em>The Boston Globe</em> Inspirational. <em>Booklist</em> The wordplay is delightful, and somehow, perhaps in part by embracing the restriction of using just three letters, Rosenthal conveys a message of gratitude for all the wonder that can be found if you really dig into the repetitive routines of our days. Lam's soft digital art has a retro inflection, but each page is a marvel of freewheeling graphic design, with curvy lines echoing one another and subtle patterning everywhere. Like every alphabet book, the art really matters, since what you see on the page has no organic or predictable relation to a story: You have to pause to figure out what is going on. It's fantastic that the time you spend looking at these pages is so full of enchantment. --The New York Times Rosenthal again demonstrates her ability to use wordplay to create stories with real emotional depth as she follows children through a day, described only in three-word, A-B-C phrases... Illustrator Lam's debut couldn't be more polished and confident: her palette seems to shift with the day's waxing and waning light, while her crisp, screenprintlike images have an understated poise and precision that highlights the quiet magic of everyday moments. --Publishers Weekly (starred review) Toronto illustrator Gracia Lam lends her artistic talent to American author Amy Krouse Rosenthal's gorgeous and whimsical picture book, which uses the first three letters of the alphabet as the jumping-off point for a series of three-word phrases describing everyday events. A birthday party scene features Lam's stylized, retro-tinged illustrations rendered in ombre pinks and purples and Rosenthal's quirky wordplay: 'Another Bright Candle, ' 'Atop Birthday Cake, ' 'Amazing Balloon Creation.' Awake Beautiful Child is a visual treat, and a fun twist on the alphabet book. --Quill & Quire Beginning with a morning stretch and ending with a flick of the bedroom light switch, readers follow various children in their daily routines. The entire text is composed of three-word phrases that begin with the consecutive letters A, B, and C. Some are simple lists: Apples, Bananas, Cantaloupes at the breakfast table, or Ants, Butterflies, Caterpillars during a walk. But others are beautiful reminders ( Always Be Curious ) or silly words of wisdom ( Avoid Blinking--Cheese! during a photograph). --Kirkus Lovely. --The Boston Globe Inspirational. --Booklist The wordplay is delightful, and somehow, perhaps in part by embracing the restriction of using just three letters, Rosenthal conveys a message of gratitude for all the wonder that can be found if you really dig into the repetitive routines of our days. Lam's soft digital art has a retro inflection, but each page is a marvel of freewheeling graphic design, with curvy lines echoing one another and subtle patterning everywhere. Like every alphabet book, the art really matters, since what you see on the page has no organic or predictable relation to a story: You have to pause to figure out what is going on. It's fantastic that the time you spend looking at these pages is so full of enchantment. --The New York Times Rosenthal again demonstrates her ability to use wordplay to create stories with real emotional depth as she follows children through a day, described only in three-word, A-B-C phrases... Illustrator Lam's debut couldn't be more polished and confident: her palette seems to shift with the day's waxing and waning light, while her crisp, screenprintlike images have an understated poise and precision that highlights the quiet magic of everyday moments. --Publishers Weekly (starred review) Toronto illustrator Gracia Lam lends her artistic talent to American author Amy Krouse Rosenthal's gorgeous and whimsical picture book, which uses the first three letters of the alphabet as the jumping-off point for a series of three-word phrases describing everyday events. A birthday party scene features Lam's stylized, retro-tinged illustrations rendered in ombre pinks and purples and Rosenthal's quirky wordplay: 'Another Bright Candle, ' 'Atop Birthday Cake, ' 'Amazing Balloon Creation.' Awake Beautiful Child is a visual treat, and a fun twist on the alphabet book. --Quill & Quire Beginning with a morning stretch and ending with a flick of the bedroom light switch, readers follow various children in their daily routines. The entire text is composed of three-word phrases that begin with the consecutive letters A, B, and C. Some are simple lists: Apples, Bananas, Cantaloupes at the breakfast table, or Ants, Butterflies, Caterpillars during a walk. But others are beautiful reminders ( Always Be Curious ) or silly words of wisdom ( Avoid Blinking--Cheese! during a photograph). --Kirkus Lovely. --The Boston Globe Inspirational. --Booklist Author InformationLisa Brown is an illustrator who lives in San Francisco with a husband and a baby. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |