It's Picture Day Today! (Richard Jackson Books (Atheneum Hardcover))
By Megan McDonald
Button is late -
Amazon Sales Rank: #1170352 in Books Published on: 2009-06-23 Original language: English Number of items: 1 Binding: Hardcover 36 pages
From Booklist For the first half, this one is pretty confounding. “Here come Buttons, followed by Feathers,” begins the text—and, sure enough, a bunch of buttons and feathers are twirling their way down a school hallway, soon to be joined by springs, rings, and “Wheely Things.” More and more seemingly random objects join the parade, all of them chattering their excitement about Picture Day. Unfortunately, a key player—Glue—is late, but when he (she? it?) shows up, everything comes together (literally). The book folds open to reveal a four-page-wide spread wherein all the various knickknacks have arranged themselves into an entire class of bizarre beings. It’s a payoff that will have many readers paging backward to find what parts of whom came from where. Though the palate seems a bit muted, Tillotson’s collage work, both creative and endearingly clunky, will awaken the inner cutter-and-paster in almost any young child. An ideal book to pair with a craft session. Preschool-Kindergarten. --Daniel Kraus About the Author Megan McDonald's many books include Baya, Baya, Lulla-by-a; Insects Are My Life; and the IRA Award-winning Is This a House for Hermit Crab? Once a librarian herself, she is now a noted visitor to libraries, and is also the author of the best-selling Judy Moody books. She lives with her husband in Sebastopol, California.Katherine Tillotson, who illustrated Megan McDonald's Penguin and Little Blue, loves to explore libraries, and spent many happy hours researching setttings for this book. She lives on a hill in San Francisco, California, with her husband and two dogs.
Bit by bit, putting it together Here's what they don't tell you in library school: You can try and learn to be a children's librarian all you want but there's one skill that is essential to your day-to-day needs and is innate. It cannot be learned. In a word: Craftiness. Not "craftiness" as in "skillful in underhand or evil schemes" (more's the pity). No, I mean "craftiness" as in how good you are at entertaining a room full of screaming tots using only wooden tongue depressors, googly eyes, and a handful of glitter. Craft programs are, for librarians like myself, sometimes almost painfully difficult. That's why it's often a blessing to find a book that will tie into such a program. Often this takes some creative thinking. I just read "The Wide-Mouthed Frog" so today we're all making froggy visors, etc. Maybe that's what's so great about "It's Picture Day Today!" by Megan McDonald, illustrated by Katherine Tillotson. Not only is it a story that, like the characters in it, comes together with panache but afterwards there's not a librarian alive who won't pluck at least a little inspiration from its fine and fiery pages. From yarn to coils to wheels to sequins, bouncy text and upbeat imagery explode in a fun new picture book creation. As with many stories for young children, it all begins with buttons. School doors open and a crowd of buttons sweep in. Naturally they are followed by the feathers, which in turn are leading the string, rings, and springs. A veritable cacophony of objects flutter, bounce, and jounce on by. The teacher takes roll, and everyone seems to be accounted for with one notable exception. Perhaps the most important object of all: Glue! In bounces glue and everyone jostles for its attention. When all is said and done, the teacher says brightly, "Don't forget . . . Say cheese!" And the room full of strange but benign objects grin now that they've formed themselves into various shapes and postures. Sometimes it just takes a little glue to pull yourself together. Word on the street has it that Ms. McDonald came up with the idea for this book while playing around with various craft supplies with her niece. There's a joy that comes when disparate objects turn themselves into recognizable shapes and objects. There isn't much text to this book, of course, but that's out of necessity. Too much talking and everything falls to shreds. The human brain is designed to see faces everywhere. It's how we're wired. We can't help it. We want to see faces everywhere that we look, and we do. Of course, it helps when the illustrator gives us a leg up. Ms. Tillotson's vast craft-related experience is on full-display here, no question. Though the book is entirely done in cut paper, you'll probably find yourself forgetting that fact more than once. You'll end up thinking the tongue depressors really were made out of wood, the ribbons are really ribbon, and the pompoms something other than just artfully torn paper fibers. There's also a real sense of energy to these pages. These objects aren't just vying for our attention. They're jostling one another to the side in order to take center stage. If you have a kid who makes even their crayons and scissors talk to one another, odds are they will instantly understand this book. If I've any objections maybe I'm sad that we don't get to see the class picture at the end. It would have been cool to see the teacher take the picture, and then see the final image at the end (maybe on an endpaper or bookflap) as a Polaroid. Ah well. One can't have everything. To sum up, this is a book for tying in a title to a craft-related storytime on the one hand, and for those kids who see playfellows in even the dust bunnies under their beds. It's peppy and fun title all around. A book for multiple needs with a bit of pep and kick to it. Good stuff. Ages 4-7.