The Hidden Alphabet

Author:   Laura Vaccaro Seeger ,  Laura Vaccaro Seeger
Publisher:   Roaring Brook Press
ISBN:  

9781596436374


Pages:   32
Publication Date:   23 November 2010
Recommended Age:   From 3 to 5 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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The Hidden Alphabet


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Overview

Here is a fresh and imaginative way to look at the alphabet. Turn to the first page of the book and you'll be greeted by a picture of an arrowhead, surrounded by a simple black frame. Once you lift the frame you'll find the arrowhead is magically transformed into the letter A. And so it goes, from Ballons, Cloud, and Door through Leaf and Mice to Yolk and Zipper. Bold distinctive images and a simple yet ingenious format make this an alphabet book to treasure.

Full Product Details

Author:   Laura Vaccaro Seeger ,  Laura Vaccaro Seeger
Publisher:   Roaring Brook Press
Imprint:   Roaring Brook Press
Dimensions:   Width: 21.10cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.00cm
Weight:   0.704kg
ISBN:  

9781596436374


ISBN 10:   1596436379
Pages:   32
Publication Date:   23 November 2010
Recommended Age:   From 3 to 5 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  Children / Juvenile
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

It's simple and elegant, and makes perfect sense for preliterate persons. Wall Street Journal Seeger, the niece of folksinger Pete Seeger, has devised an artful lift-the-flap ABC. From A to Z, labeled die-cut openings in glossy black paper purport to show an arrowhead, balloons, a cloud and a door. When readers peek beneath the paper frames, however, they discover a letter of the alphabet. What look like two horizontal white eggs on a gingham napkin are also the indentations in a letter E. Two parallel nails, tilting on a diagonal, turn out to be the slanted angles of the capital N. A plump white quotation mark against a red background doubles as the oval center of a Q. And the curvaceous hollow body of a ukelele forms the dip in the letter U. Seeger inverts positive and negative space in her paintings, whose warm colors glow from the windows in the light-absorbing black paper; she even incorporates die-cuts into the dust jacket. Her words and images indicate which letter lurks under each flap, and her variably sized rectangular windows give tantalizing hints to the hidden shapes. The design is unerringly elegant: each flap lifts from bottom to top to reveal a solid, symmetrical letter form, and the 26 folded pages, printed on tough heavyweight stock, make for a thick but not unwieldy volume. Seeger makes an interactive game of the alphabet and fashions a sophisticated presentation. Publishers Weekly Starred Review From the black book jacket with cutout openings for each letter of the title to the vibrant, painterly strokes of yellow on the endpapers, Hidden Alphabet is a visual delight. A black mat frames an object on each page. When it is lifted, each of these objects becomes a significant part of the letter's negative space (e.g., two balloons form circles to make the openings in the letter B ). This clever trick of changing viewers' perspective from foreground to background will keep readers turning the pages to see the other optical illusions this pictorial byplay produces. Because of the way they are formed, the letters are not always completely conventional in shape. This may challenge very young children to identify them, but readers of any age will enjoy seeing a mouse turn into an M made of cheese with a few tiny chunks nibbled out of it. Seeger's interesting word choices-arrowhead, inkblot, olive, partridge, quotation mark, yolk-and her sophisticated paintings make this a fascinating artistic experience as well as a learning opportunity. School Library Journal Seeger's Hidden Alphabet uses a timeworn approach to A through Z that matches each letter with a word that begins with that letter, then adds a lift-the-flap format and a striking graphic design to transform the book into something new. Each shiny, thick black page features a cut-away through which children can view vibrantly colored objects, such as balloons. By lifting the flap, children will be surprised to discover that the object actually forms part of a letter. Kids may need help recognizing some of the objects featured, but the design is bold and clean enough to make the letters easily discernible. It is a book that manages to be both child friendly and visually exciting. Booklist An outstanding alphabet book...Each page comes as an ingenious surprise...Beautifully designed, fascinating to browse, and eminently successful. Kirkus Reviews Starred Review Recommended book: ...Each page is executed with polish and panache...This is begging for use in art class... The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books Hidden Alphabet is a visual delight...Seeger's sophisticated paintings make this a fascinating artistic experience as well as/a learning opportunity. School Library Journal Starred Review ...A Concept Book with a capital C...This is great bookmaking, and a snazzy-though sophisticated-addition to the alphabet bookshelf. Horn Book


<p> It's simple and elegant, and makes perfect sense for preliterate persons. -- Wall Street Journal Publishers Weekly Starred Review Seeger, the niece of folksinger Pete Seeger, has devised an artful lift-the-flap ABC. From A to Z, labeled die-cut openings in glossy black paper purport to show an arrowhead, balloons, a cloud and a door. When readers peek beneath the paper frames, however, they discover a letter of the alphabet. What look like two horizontal white eggs on a gingham napkin are also the indentations in a letter E. Two parallel nails, tilting on a diagonal, turn out to be the slanted angles of the capital N. A plump white quotation mark against a red background doubles as the oval center of a Q. And the curvaceous hollow body of a ukelele forms the dip in the letter U. Seeger inverts positive and negative space in her paintings, whose warm colors glow from the windows in the light-absorbing black paper; she even incorporates die-cuts into the dust jacket.


Author Information

Laura Vaccaro Seeger is an award-winning graphic artist whose work has appeared on numerous television programs. She lives in Rockville Centre, NY.

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