Showing posts with label Candlewick Press. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Candlewick Press. Show all posts

4.14.2019

Smile

How Charlie Chaplin
Taught the World
to Laugh (and Cry) 

Candlewick Press
(pub. 3.26.2019) 
48 pages

A True Tale with
A Cherry On Top   

A uthor: Gary Golio
 and illustrator: Ed Young 
 
C haracter: Charlie Chaplin

O
 verview from the jacket flap: 
     "Once there was a boy named Charlie who roamed the streets of London, hungry for life (and maybe a bit of bread). He lived in one small room with his actress mum and his older brother, Sydney. They didn't have much to smile about, but Charlie was born to perform - whether dancing for pennies in front of the pub, reciting  a funny poem for his class, or acting in theater troupes around town. 
       When Charlie told his mum about a wobbly old man in baggy clothes with turned-out feet and a crooked cane, his mother found it sad, but young Charlie came to see that sometimes, Funny and Sad went hand in hand."
    
T antalizing taste:  

"Now, while Mum was sick
And Sydney in the Navy
Charlie took what jobs he could find.
As errand boy for a doctor.
Teaching dance to children.
Even making toy boats that he could sell for a penny.

Still, some days
He'd shed a tear or two
Just waiting for the sun to come
Brightly shining through.

      But then....

The chance of a lifetime -
A plum part in a play!"

And something more: The Afterword of SMILE explains that without "Charlie Chaplin, there probably wouldn't be movies the way we know them today. He found a way to make us laugh and cry in the same film, to make us care about the characters and their adventures. Actor, writer, director, composer, songwriter, editor, producer, and distributor - he was the first to do it all, and he did it masterfully... In Charlie's Little Tramp character, what seemed like weakness often turned out to be strength. What was a problem became a solution."

7.16.2018

The Secret Kingdom

Nek Chand, a Changing India,
and a Hidden World of Art

Candlewick Press
(pub. 2.13.2018)
 48 pages

A True Tale with
A Cherry On Top   

A uthor:  Barb Rosenstock
    and illustrator: Claire A. Nivola

C haracter: Nek Chand Saini

O
 verview from the jacket flap: 

     "As a refugee during the partition of India in 1947, Nek Chand Saini was resettled in the city of Chandigarh with nothing but the stories he carried in his heart from his homeland. Dismayed at the modern new city he now lived in, he began collecting broken glass, cracked water pots, and discarded construction materials.
     In a section of wilderness he cleared himself , Nek Chand built the Rock Garden, full of curving paths, intricate mosaics, and hundreds of sculptures of people and animals, which eventually grew to a thirteen-acre wonderland.  It was his tribute to the village of his youth, a land full of hidden stories."

T antalizing taste: 
      
      "Then on the banks of the village stream, Nek built a world of his own He dug silt palaces and spilled waterfalls, molded clay goddesses and planted stick kinds He found rocks shaped like jackals, monkeys, and geese, and made them pounce, scamper, or fly...
     Nek became a farmer, part of the ancient cycle of changing seasons and shared stories.
     Until the men with guns came."  
 
and something more: In the Author's Note, Barb Rosenstock explains that "Nek Chand is a famous folk artist. Between three and four thousand people a day visit his Rock Garden of Chandigarh, a wonderland built fro recycled materials. The Rock Garden is the largest visionary art environment in the world, now twenty-five acres of art set on a forth-acre site....
     Until his death in 2015 at age ninety, Nek Chand spent each day at home in the Rock Garden meeting with visitors, creating new plans, and supervising the continued constructions of his kingdom."  
     The Secret Kingdom includes a delightful surprise -- gatefold pages featuring a photograph of the Rock Garden.

5.06.2018

When Paul Met Artie

The Story of Simon & Garfunkel

Candlewick Press

(pub 3.20.2018)
 48 pages

A True Tale with
A Cherry On Top   

A uthor:  G. Neri
    
and illustrator: David Litchfield

C haracters: Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel

O
 verview from the jacket flap: 

     "Long before they became one of the most beloved and successful duos of all time, Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel were just two kids growing up in Queens New York - best friends who met in a sixth-grade production of Alice in Wonderful and bonded over girls, baseball, and rock 'n' roll.  As teens, they practiced singing into a tape recorder, building harmonies that blended their voices until they sounded just right. They wrote songs together, pursued big-time music producers, and dreamed of becoming stars, never imagining how far their music would take them."

T antalizing taste:        
"Paul teaches himself how to play
'Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer'-
only like Elvis would:
hair slicked back, collar up, 
hips shaking.
The other thing shaking
is his dad's head when he realizes
all Paul cares about
is rock 'n' roll.
When Paul asks him
how to play a new radio hit
called 'Earth Angel,'
his dad shows him
the five basic chords
in every rock 'n' roll song.
For Paul, it's like the floodgates
open." 
 
and something more: The Bibliography shows the depth of G. Neri's research for this poetic book: "This story was compiled from a variety of sources: books, magazines, newspapers, radio, video, and archival material. As much as possible, I tried to use Mr. Simon and Mr. Garfunkel's primary sources of information, collecting from more than 250 interviews and articles from the last sixty years as found on www.artgarfunkel.com, www.paul-simon.info, and in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame archives, as well as many other online video and audio sources. Dialogue comes mostly from direct recollections from the duo..."

4.18.2016

Jazz Day

The Making of a
Famous Photograph

Candlewick Press
(published 3.8.2016) 66 pages

A True Tale
with A Cherry On Top

A uthor: Roxane Orgill
      and Illustrator: Francis Vallejo

C haracters: Jazz musicians & photographer Art Kane
                

O verview from the jacket flap:

    "In 1958, Esquire magazine was planning a special issue focused on American jazz. Art Kane, a graphic designer in New York City, pitched a crazy idea: gather a many jazz musicians as were willing and photograph the group. Kane got the assignment - but he didn't own a professional camera, he didn't know how many musicians would show up, and he wanted to shoot the photograph in front of a Harlem brownstone. Would his idea work?

      Kane pulled it off, and in Jazz Day, Roxane Orgill takes us inside the frame of his famous photograph, Harlem 1958, with a collection of poems that re-creates that serendipitous day. She captures the musicians' mischief and quirks, their pleasure in seeing each other, and the vivacious atmosphere of a Harlem block full of kids on a hot summer's day. Francis Vallejo's vibrant paintings are reminiscent of a rich period in jazz history and do justice to the larger-that-life quality of the musicians of the era."

T antalizing taste:

 Names
William "Count" Basie, pianist

"Nobody calls me Bill
Except my wife
I'm the Count
Ol' Base
Or Holy Main
As in main stem
The buck stops here
Guys in the band
They give you a name
To fit your personality
Or your playing
Same thing
Dizzy
Fump
Stuff
Hawk
Hot Lips
Red
Pee Wee
Pres
Short for President
Of the Tenor Saxophone
Who's Lester Young
Got his name
From Eleanora
Known as Billie Holiday
Except to Pres
Who calls her Lady Day
He calls lots of people Lady
Even me"

and something more:  I love hearing about the background of a story and I believe certain stories do indeed tell their authors how they should be told. In the Author's Note in Jazz Day, Roxane Orgill explains that the "verses about the musicians are based on fact ... I've known of Art Kane's photograph for about as long as I've been listening to jazz, which I got to know as a sideline to my job as a classical music critic... I wanted to tell the story of how the photo got made and of some of the people who happened to be in it. What I didn't expect was that I'd begin writing poems. I write prose, not poetry But this story demanded a sense of freedom, an intensity, and a conciseness that prose could not provide."Yes! Prose poetry is perfect for this story.

2.02.2014

Electrical Wizard

How Nikola Tesla
Lit Up The World

This post joins other
kidlit bloggers on the
Nonfiction Monday Roundup
and also joins It's Monday!
What are you reading?

(pub. 9.10.2013)  40 pages

A True Tale with 
A Cherry On Top

A uthor: Elizabeth Rusch
           and Illustrator: Oliver Dominguez
    
C haracter: NIKOLA TESLA

O verview from the jacket flap: 

"Move over, Thomas Edison! Serbian-American inventor Nikola Tesla takes center stage in the first-ever picture-book biography of the man responsible for lighting our lives with electricity...

Tesla faced many obstacles along the way, including the great American inventor Thomas Edison, who was a staunch defender of the direct-current electrical system. But Tesla worked tirelessly to proved that AC, not DC, was the wave of the future. He proved it at the Chicago World's Fair and at Niagara Falls - and his proof lives on today in a world transformed by his inventions ..."

T antalizing taste: 

     "The night of Nikola Tesla's birth, lightning zapped, crackled, and flashed overhead. For years after, booming thunder drew the poor Serbian boy to the window of his family's small house. Nikola gazed, mystified, as electrical bolts ricocheted across the sky.
      One evening, when he was three, Nikola stroked his cat, Macak. The cat's fur snapped with tiny sparks. 'What is it?' ...
     'Electricity,' his father explained...
     Enchanted by the sparking halo his hands had conjured, Nikola wondered what other magic he could perform."

and something more: The extensive back matter in Electrical Wizard includes a section called "Tesla vs. Edison: The Rivalry" which not only sets forth the rivalry, but also the harsh treatment Thomas Edison gave to Nikola Tesla. For example, "Though Edison dismissed Tesla's ideas about alternating current, he did hire the young engineer. For a year, Nikola toiled for Edison, often from 10:30 a.m. until five the next morning. Edison said to him, 'I have had many hardworking assistants but you take the cake.'  He promised to pay Tesla $50,000 to improve his direct-current motors. Tesla did, but when he tried to collect his pay, Edison just laughed. 'Tesla, you don't understand our American humor.' Nikola stormed out of Edison's office. The young engineer struggled financially for months, even digging ditches to feed himself."  Later, Edison "strove to squelch" any competition and projects from Tesla. Readers are certainly exposed to a different side of Thomas Edison.

7.15.2013

Becoming Babe Ruth


This post joins other
Nonfiction Monday blogs
hosted today by Wrapped in Foil
and joins It's Monday!
What are you reading?

Candlewick Press
(pub. 2.12.2013) 40 pages 

A True Tale with A Cherry On Top

A uthor and Illustrator: Matt Tavares
    
haracter: Babe Ruth

O verview from the jacket flap: 

      "Before becoming the Babe, George Herman Ruth is just a boy who lives in Baltimore and gets into a lot of trouble. But when he tuns seven, his father brings him to the gates of Saint Mary's Industrial School of Boy, and his life is changed forever.
       At Saint Mary's, George is expected to follow a lot of rules - and he gets to play baseball almost every day. Under the watchful eye of Brother Matthias, George evolves as a player and as a man, when he sets of into the wild world of big-league baseball, his family back at Saint Mary's is never far from his heart.
      Matt Tavares's striking homage ... conveys an important message about honoring the place from which you came."

T antalizing taste: 

"A fire has swept through
Saint Mary's Industrial School for Boys.
Nearly every building has been destroyed.
Babe Ruth has an idea.
He writes a letter to Brother Matthias...
For the final two weeks
of the 1920 baseball season,
the school bank form Saint Mary's
gets to join the New York Yankees
on a road trip across America...
The fifty boys from Saint Mary's
get to go to all the games.
They play a concert in the stands
before each game
and another concert every night...
to help rebuild the place where
the 'Sultan of Swat'
learned how to play baseball." 

and something more: I've been featuring baseball player picture books lately -- must be a summer series!  I like that this story not only pays tribute to the enormous influence of Father Matthias in helping Babe Ruth develop into a star baseball play, but also the focus on the need to practice, practice, practice one's passion. As author/illustrator Matt Tavares explains in the Author's Note: "As a lifelong baseball fan, I've always been fascinated by Babe Ruth. As I researched his life, one thing that struck me was the fact that even the 'Sultan of Swat,' who seemed to possess superhuman abilities, needed lots of help along the way. Becoming the king of baseball took countless hours of practice and plenty of support and guidance from his school and from his teacher and mentor, Brother Matthias." 

9.02.2012

A President from Hawai'i


President Barack Obama

This post is part of Nonfiction Monday hosted today by ...
The Swimmer Writer 
and joins It's Monday! What are you reading? at Teacher Mentor Texts
(pub. 7.31.2012) 32 pages 

A True Tale with A Cherry On Top

A uthors: Dr. Terry Carolan and Joanna Carolan
             and illustrator: Elizabeth Zunon
    
haracter: President Barack Obama

O verview from the jacket flap: 

      "Take a trip to Hawai'i and catch a wave of aloha spirit in this fact-filled tribute to the birthplace of Barack Obama the first president of the United States born here.
       Growing up in Honolulu, young Barack was surrounded by the values of kokua (help), lokahi (unity), and 'ohana (family). Local authors Dr. Terry Carolan and Joanna Carolan bring the rich cultural diversity, breathtaking beauty, and welcoming spirit of the fiftieth state to young ones everywhere, providing a look into President Obama's childhood and the Hawaiian traditions and history that shaped him.
       Vividly painted scenes of the lush Hawaiian landscape by Elizabeth Zunon bring the natural beauty of the Aloha State to radiant life, while public and family photographs and quotations from the president give a firsthand perspective..." 
        
T antalizing taste: 

   "In Hawaiian culture, tradition plays a big part.
     Living with aloha means giving from the heart.
     It is a gesture of aloha to give a flower lei.
     Showing kindness always is the aloha way."

                   "That's why we pass on the values of empathy
                    and kindness to our children by living them."
                    -Barack Obama, Chicago, Illinois, 6/1/08

and something more:  This weekend marked the one year anniversary of the release of the picture book I wrote, My Hands Sing the Blues - Romare Bearden's Childhood Journey, (Marshall Cavendish) illustrated by the incredibly talented Elizabeth Zunon. Liz is not only the illustrator of My Hands Sing the Blues and A President From Hawai'i, but has illustrated three other books this past year --  Lala Salama - A Tanzanian Lullaby by Patricia MacLachlan, The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind by William Kamkwamba, and How Many Spots Does A Leopard Have? (An African Folktale). Warmest congratulations to Liz!
         Liz kindly shared with me some of the background for creating the illustrations for A President from Hawai'i: "After a lot of sketching and re-sketching scenes with multiple characters for the book, the publisher decided to simplify the illustrations to allow Obama family photographs to be included in the spreads. I LOVE tropical flowers and landscapes, and this was my opportunity to try and emulate the tactile elements that I imagine take center stage in Hawaii. Many of the tropical flowers that grow in Hawaii also grow in my childhood home in the Ivory Coast (West Africa), so it was a thrill painting and making them out of paper. Note: The flowers on the glossary page (Bougainvillea and Hibiscus) are the flowers that grew on our balcony back home in the Ivory Coast :)"  
         Thanks, Liz, for not only giving an insight into the background of the illustrations, but also sharing your personal connections. I can't wait to share this book with the second graders in the classroom in which I have the privilege of volunteering every week. I know they will love it!