“The Newbery and Art” at the Horn Book

h1 June 22nd, 2022    by jules



 

It was my pleasure to contribute a piece to the Horn Book’s recent issue (the May/June 2022 issue) celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Newbery Award. I wrote about the Newbery and art, which involved me lugging home, multiple times, a trunk full of award-winning illustrated novels and picture books, all in the name of research. Lovely.

That article is here, or you can click the image above, a screenshot from their site.

“I didn’t know I could climb so high. …”

h1 June 21st, 2022    by jules



 
How about a French picture book import? I’ve a review over at the Horn Book of Morgane de Cadier’s‘s Just to See (Blue Dot Kids Press, May 2022), illustrated by Florian Pigé and translated by Johanna McCalmont.

That review is here, and below are some spreads. [Note: Reading this review at their site may require a subscription to the Horn Book.]

Enjoy!

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7-Imp’s 7 Kicks #799: Featuring Rahele Jomepour Bell

h1 June 19th, 2022    by jules


Early sketch
(Click image to enlarge)


 

Final spread: “Anger comes from deep inside and bursts out. But then, it’s gone.
And then, I have room for a new feeling. One that feels much better.”

(Click spread to enlarge)


 
It’s a pleasure to welcome illustrator Rahele Jomepour Bell to 7-Imp today. She shares some early sketches from Angry Me (Groundwood, May 2022), Sandra V. Feder’s new picture book. “I get angry,” the book opens. A girl stares in the mirror, her body hunched and rage on her face. The book explores the girl’s sources of anger: when she feels that people are being mean, even when it’s all “a mistake”; when things don’t feel fair; when she’s fatigued or frustrated; when other children hurt her feelings; and when she’s sad. The second half of the book explores the ways in which she attempts to deal with the strong feeling: “When I get angry, I try to remember to use my words. … But sometimes, even my words come out sounding angry.”

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Ali Bahrampour’s Monsters in the Fog

h1 June 16th, 2022    by jules



 
One of my very favorite picture books this year is Ali Bahrampour’s Monsters in the Fog (Abrams, June 2022), which I reviewed for BookPage. To read more about this very funny book, you can read the review here. (Pictured above is the entertaining title page illustration.)

Today, I’ve got some spreads from the book, and Ali also visits to share some early sketches. Lucky me — because I always like to see an artist’s early sketches — Ali managed to find these, adding that he throws almost everything away as he works. Here’s what he says about the book:

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Pip and Zip

h1 June 14th, 2022    by jules



 
I love to see those well-crafted picture books that address, in one way or another, the COVID-19 pandemic — the ones that are a snapshot of these unsettling times. Elana K. Arnold’s Pip and Zip (Roaring Brook Press, August 2022), illustrated by Doug Salati, is a new one that, in particular, captures the beginning of it all when the whole world seemed to shut down.

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7-Imp’s 7 Kicks #798: Featuring Red Nose Studio

h1 June 12th, 2022    by jules


(Click spread to enlarge)


 
If anyone is going to add to the large stack of picture books about construction equipment, I’m glad it’s Red Nose Studio. Chris Sickels is the artist behind it all (here’s my 2013 interview with him). He creates sculptural and 3D illustrations, and for Build! (Anne Schwartz Books, May 2022), he created “hand-built sculptures made from scraps of wood and found objects, mixed in with some wire, clay, paint, fabric, and a shovel full of imagination.”

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The Queen in the Cave: “The wonders were infinite.”

h1 June 9th, 2022    by jules



 
The U.S. edition of Júlia Sardà’s The Queen in the Cave (Candlewick) was released last month (it was first published in the UK last year), but I read it months before that. (I ended up with an early review copy.) And it’s been on my mind all that time. This, what the publisher calls a modern fairy tale, is Sardà’s debut as both author and illustrator. And it’s mesmerizing.

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See You Someday Soon

h1 June 7th, 2022    by jules


It can be challenging to write about a picture book with die-cuts. Ideally, you manage to find a copy of the book to experience the book design for yourself — and let the die-cuts and page-turns surprise you in the ways they are meant to. I do hope you can find a copy of Pat Zietlow Miller’s See You Someday Soon (Roaring Brook, June 2022), illustrated by Suzy Lee (winner of the Hans Christian Andersen Award for illustrating!). It is a playful and bighearted intergenerational tale that bursts right out of the gates with color, shape, and movement.

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7-Imp’s 7 Kicks #797: Featuring Ellen Heck

h1 June 5th, 2022    by jules


(Click image to see spread in its entirety)


 
There’s no shortage of alphabet picture books, but be sure to make way for the distinctive and dynamic A is for Bee: An Alphabet Book in Translation (Levine Querido, June 2022) from Ellen Heck. It’s a book that (per the author’s bio) was inspired by Heck reading Lithuanian alphabet books to her son.

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The Horn Book‘s Chat with Kevin Young

h1 June 2nd, 2022    by jules



 

Kevin Young’s Emile and the Field, illustrated by Chioma Ebinama, is the 2022 picture book I’ve been pushing on everyone who can stand to listen to me, because I love it so. Thanks to the Horn Book for letting me be a small part of a Q&A with Kevin. That chat is here.

(And here is a link to my March 7-Imp post with some spreads from the book along with a link to my Horn Book review of it.)