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Loading... All the World (original 2009; edition 2009)by Liz Garton Scanlon (Author)
Work InformationAll the World by Liz Garton Scanlon (2009)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. I actually prefer this Caldecott Honor to the winner of its year, The Lion and the Mouse. It's original, contemporary, and important, as our world gets more and more crowded with people who don't understand that we are all one global community and each of our choices affects multitudes of others. Would that we all lived as these people do, in harmony, with courage. And besides, it's poetic, appealing, engaging, full of fun & funny details. I hope you all get a chance to read it! Btw, I have enjoyed everything Frazee's worked on so far, and will continue to watch for more works by her. This book is hard to describe as strikes me as a meditation and a prayer and a hope for communicating the beauty of the world to a child. I love it! The world is wide, amazing, beautiful, full of love (without sounding like the song “Imagine'“). The accompanying illustrations really capture the sense of hope and peace. This would be such a beautiful part of a bedtime routine.
CCBC (Cooperative Children's Book Center Choices 2010) Rock, stone, pebble, sand / Body, shoulder, arm, hand / A moat to dig, a shell to keep / All the world is wide and deep.” Liz Garton Scanlon marries small details to big ideas in the lyrical cadence of connections that comprise her picture book narrative. With great economy of language, Scanlon vividly catalogs a series of objects and activities familiar to young children and then graces each with an eloquent and comforting observation that embraces the wider world. Artist Marla Frazee transforms the poetic text into story with illustrations showing individuals in a small town over the course of a single day. Opening with pictures showing two children collecting rocks at the beach, the next few pages follow the pair and their parents as they play on the shore before driving off toward the nearby town. This family and others in their richly diverse community are shown going from beach, to market, to park, to cafe, to home, with paths that intersect, diverge, and come together again along the way. Frazee’s skilled technique conveys personalities and relationships in a manner that invites young readers to study the pages, following easily identifiable faces and family groups from place to place. This exemplary union of words and pictures begs for repeated readings and leisurely time spent inspecting the inclusive illustrations. CCBC Category: Picture Books for Babies,Toddlers, and Preschoolers. 2009, Beach Lane, 40 pages, $17.99. Ages 2-6. Belongs to Publisher SeriesAwardsNotable Lists
Pictures and rhyming text celebrate a family's day spent going to the beach, shopping at the market, eating at a restaurant and spending the evening with the rest of the extended family. No library descriptions found.
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)811.6Literature American literature in English American poetry in English 2000-LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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A librarian friend gave Lily this book for her first birthday and we read it a lot. Pretty sure I cried the first time I read it.
It features a family on vacation and shows various scenes from daily life around them, then progresses to them hanging out with extended family or friends.
The art is beautiful and so is the poetry. ( )