
“Malala is born at dawn in 1997. …”
— From Raphaële Frier’s Malala: Activist for Girls’ Education,
illustrated by Aurélia Fronty
(Click to enlarge spread)
“One morning John sat down to a huge breakfast Ma Sally had cooked for him …”
— From Rachel Himes’ Princess and the Peas
(Click to enlarge spread)
“The first time Sophie left the ground with Jean-Pierre,
she watched the earth fall slowly away. …”
— From Matthew Clark Smith’s Lighter than Air: Sophie Blanchard,
the First Woman Pilot, illustrated by Matt Tavares
(Click to enlarge)
— From Victoria Turnbull’s Pandora
I wrote
here at
Kirkus at the end of March about some new picture books with multi-faceted, groundbreaking, innovative, and/or otherwise complex women of all stripes, both real and fictional.
I’m following up today with art from each book — Rachel Himes’ Princess and the Peas (Charlesbridge, April 2017); Matthew Clark Smith’s Lighter than Air: Sophie Blanchard, the First Woman Pilot, illustrated by Matt Tavares (Candlewick, March 2017); Raphaële Frier’s Malala: Activist for Girls’ Education (Charlesbridge, February 2017), illustrated by Aurélia Fronty and first published in France in 2015; and Victoria Turnbull’s Pandora (Clarion, April 2017).
And while we’re on the subject of Victoria Turnbull, I’ve got some spreads from her Kings of the Castle, coming later this month from Candlewick. Because, why not?
Enjoy!
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