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Edition: Paperback, 32 pages
ISBN-10: 0544987314
ISBN-13: 9780544987319
Ã¥ Å©±â: 27.8 cm x 22.7 cm
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Book Description
In this hilarious gem from triple Caldecott winner David Wiesner, it's big sister to the rescue when a new baby is delivered to a family of robots and the adults are flummoxed by technical difficulties.
A new baby's arrival is a big moment in any family, even a family of robots. Award winner David Wiesner captures the excitement and fanfare when baby Flange appears--as a crate full of components. The adults bungle the process of assembling Flange, with catastrophic results. Big sister Cathy, with her handy toolbox and advanced knowledge of robotics and IT, hasn't been allowed to help, but in the ensuing chaos she calmly clears up the technical difficulties and bonds with her new baby brother. A shout-out for girl scientists and makers, Robobaby is an eye-opening and engaging blend of the familiar and the fantastic.
Kirkus Reviews *Starred Review*
"A retro-futuristic romp, literally and figuratively screwy."
Bulletin of the Center for Children¡¯s Books
"Wiesner¡¯s friendly robots, despite their clunky metal framework, infuse their twilit extraterrestrial world with warmth and mutual support, making this a convivial, if offbeat, addition to the new-baby-on-the-way collection.
Publishers Weekly
The plot of Caldecott Medalist Wiesner¡¯s latest gives his artistic gifts a new challenge: rendering machines as living beings. A robot family welcomes an assemble-it-yourself baby robot but can¡¯t get it running properly until their daughter comes to the rescue with her trusty toolkit. Shapely architectural lines form the metallic family--willowy mother Diode, stout father Lugnut, small daughter Cathode, chubby baby Flange, and dog Sprocket--and an illuminated floor lights the family from below, giving the spreads a warm glow. Energy tightens as the adults try to build the malfunctioning robobaby (¡°Thanks, Cathy,¡± says Diode, screwdriver in hand, ¡°but this is a mother¡¯s job¡±). Relatives come to visit (¡°Aunt Gasket!¡±), and robotechs arrive to snag the rocket-propelled baby with a net (¡°He needs a complete overhaul¡±). As the chaos intensifies, trying to work out which parts belong to which robot becomes its own visual puzzle. Against the how-things-work mayhem, smooth fields of color, streamlined panel artwork, and fastidious speech bubble typography make every spread elegant.
School Library Journal
As in the mysterious goings-on of that particular Tuesday (Clarion, 1991) not long ago, Wiesner again takes off on a flight of fantasy, this time set in the not-too-distant future. This sci-fi adventure begins with Holly Evans, a visionary third grader who launches some seedlings into the ionosphere as part of a science experiment. And so the fun begins. Cabbages fill the sky in one part of the country, turnips in another. ``Lima beans loom over Levittown.'' ``Parsnips pass by Providence.'' Yankee ingenuity reigns supreme as the mammoth veggies are put to some rather creative uses. Of course, there's an extraterrestial twist to this healthful tale and the true fate of Holly's project is at last revealed. The exquisite watercolors are truly out of this world. The three-quarter page paintings utilize unusual perspective and are filled with clever detail. The photorealistic quality of the figures and background vistas only underscores the absurdity of the gigantic airborne produce and accentuates the deadpan humor. By all accounts, June 29, 1999 is a date to remember.
The New York Times Book Review
Some may grouse that {Mr. Wiesner} has become formulaic. These are the same people who complain about plot structure in Marx Brothers films. They miss the whole point. Mr. Wiesner has not resorted to cliche or routine. His images continue to be original, imaginative and delightful, and he's added some new dimensions. . . . David Wiesner's real strength is vivid, innovative illustrations. The image of tethered red bell peppers hovering off the coastline is as silly as the sedate flying frogs in 'Tuesday.' Sheep, looking appropriately perplexed, graze among mammoth string beans in the Southwest with desert buttes in the distance. Peas from Peoria dwarf boats on the Mississippi, as a train hauls an immense purple eggplant from Mobile. . . . The best part of Mr.Wiesner's watercolors, however, is the sly details that may escape the first or even second reading. |
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Flotsam Caldecott Medal ¼ö..
7,800¿ø | |
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