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[ ¼Áö Á¤º¸ ]
Hardcover: 40 pages
ISBN-10: 141695872X
ISBN-13: 978-1416958727
Ã¥ Å©±â: 21.2 cm x 19.7 cm
[ ¿µ¹® ¼Æò ]
Book Description
The simple playthings, the everyday moments, picking up that hundredth rock -- all of these are brimming with possibility...if you slow down and let the future begin with the small moments of today. Because everything depends on letting a little boy...be a little boy.
Publishers Weekly
Watching his tousled-haired son navigate a typical day, a father wistfully reflects on boyhood's pleasures-especially the endless possibilities presented by a big cardboard box. McGhee (previously paired with Reynolds for Someday) uses William Carlos Williams's The Red Wheelbarrow as a jumping-off point for the hand-lettered text: Little boy, so much depends on¡¦/ your starship pajamas,/ that story about llamas,/ the way you don't worry,/ the way you won't hurry,/ and¡¦ your big cardboard box. Keeping props to a minimum in his watercolor-and-ink vignettes, Reynolds portrays the young hero at full kid throttle. Confident, independent and inexhaustible, the boy turns the cardboard box into a pirate ship, a stepladder, a spaceman's costume and a crash pad. In short, he's the very definition of Everyboy-if the computer or TV set had never been invented. Those absences suggest that the book's appeal is a nostalgic one-and that the most appreciative audience may be former boys like Dad himself.
School Library Journal
The duo that created Someday (S & S, 2006), a picture book celebrating a mother's affection and hopes for her daughter, now presents the reflections of a father about his young son. Once again, there is ample white space around the charming pen, ink, and watercolor illustrations. The artwork bursts with energy as the boy engages in all sorts of activities, such as playing with a truck, romping with the dog, and browsing through books. The straightforward text, written from the dad's perspective, recounts the simple things that are important to his child: "Little boy, so much depends on¡¦a puddle to jump,/sand to dump,/truck down the hall,/pencil lines that mark how tall." A repeated refrain shows the youngster finding numerous fun uses for his "big cardboard box." This title may also resonate most with adults, though it has more child appeal than Someday. |
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