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Edition : Hardcover: 32 pages
ISBN-10: 0688132723
ISBN-13: 978-0688132729
Ã¥ Å©±â : 26cm x 21cm
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Annotation
A picture book provides a simple introduction to the things that often happen at a wedding.
From the Publisher
Whether it's a Shinto rite in Japan, an Orthodox Jewish service in Russia, a Catholic mass in Slovakia or a short ceremony at city hall in Los Angeles, a wedding is a special celebration. This photographic look at weddings invites children on a trip around the world and provides a glimpse into the rich variety of world cultures.
Children's Literature
The author takes a thematic approach to showing communities of the world in her seventh book. Morris, an expert at writing meaningful nonfiction for early learners, includes informative photographs, sparse writing, broad representation, and lots of room for children to theorize about how different customs differ in communities. In the early grades, children can interview their parents/grandparents to complete research on their families' traditional wedding garb. Photographs of their elders' weddings could also be shared for a comparative study of customs and history.
Around the world wedding bells ring and photographers snap their photos. Here is a book filled with a mix of posed and candid photographs that illustrate the similarities and diversities in a wedding ceremony. A sparse but succinct text highlights the way people of different customs and religions from around the world celebrate their weddings. A photo index in the back, indicates the country and religion of each photograph and includes some information about the particular ceremony. A map is drawn to highlight the countries included in the book. Unfortunately, this map also points out an lack of representation from South and Central America and high concentration in Northern Europe. Otherwise, it is an entertaining and informative book.
School Library Journal
Brief texts introduce their title topics, but it is really the rich, full-color photos from around the world that tell the stories. Unfortunately, the countries are not identified in the body of the book; instead, readers must turn to the index, which features a reduced print of each shot and an accompanying sentence or two identifying the location and giving a bit more information. There is also a map of the world indicating the setting of each photo. Shoes is loosely organized into categories such as working shoes, dancing shoes, shoes for ice or snow, and anytime-at-all shoes. It's an interesting way to take an armchair tour, and could be used to spark a geography, social studies, or multicultural unit. Margaret Miller's Whose Shoe? (Greenwillow, 1991) and Ron Roy's Whose Shoes Are These? (Clarion, 1991) both examine only function and not location. In Weddings, dress and customs are appealingly displayed in the stunning candid shots of a variety of ceremonies and receptions. The facts provided are so sparse, however, that the book won't satisfy curious children. This is not as successful as Morris's Tools or Houses and Homes (both Lothrop, 1992), or Shoes; nor does it have as logical curricular applications. While attractive, both books are more for browsing than for garnering information.Peg Glisson, Dewitt Road School, Webster, NY |
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