Showing posts with label Children's Illustration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Children's Illustration. Show all posts

Wednesday, 1 September 2021

Book review for 'Les Sardines A L'Huile' by Glyn Boyd Harte


ISBN: 978-1-912066-54-4 
Published by Design for Today
Publishers website www.designfortoday.co.uk

My book review for the A.O.I. Blog can be found here

Book review for 'A World Full Of Wildlife and How You Can Protect It' written and illustrated by Neal Layton


HB ISBN: 978-1-5263-6323-7  

PB ISBN: 978-1-5263-6321-3  

E-book ISBN: 978-1-5263-6322-0  


Published by Wren & Rook      

Publishers website https://www.hachettechildrens.co.uk/    

Neil Layton’s Agent’s website https://www.arenaillustration.com/artists/neal-layton/ 


Pitch
How do you communicate complex ideas and inter-related biological systems to young children? How do you convert ideas into long lasting actions? Author and illustrator Neal Layton accomplishes all of this in his new picture book. He understands that children love nature, they want to engage with ecology and   

these passions can be harnessed for good. This book was inspired by Sir David Attenborough, who said: “No one will protect what they don’t care about, and no one will care about what they have never experienced.” 

  

Review  

The first part of his story acts to raise awareness in the reader. We find out the common terms used to describe our wild world and where they need to be applied. I liked how we are shown Biodiversity, the Web of life and how important the smallest organisms are to these systems for them to work optimally. The second part provides us with the means to make a difference. The most important point is to show what nations are doing to change things, the fact there is a global effort to improve matters. The powerful are acting and you can help them is the clear message that we are left with.   

  

Layton’s illustrations are bold, sophisticated, loose, dynamic using bold colours and photo-collaged elements to good effect. He can transport us to a variety of locations and landscape types using humour and upbeat mark making. He can capture the essence of a creature without it having to be perfectly rendered. Things look a bit odd, but they are where they need to be 100%. His drawings aid his cause (I’d like to see his work on activity sheets as this I feel would add visual and creative energy to a set of instructions for children). The cover is dominated by a huge tree with the book title boldly displayed inside its corona. A young child sits next to an owl and a squirrel, they seem at peace. The back cover shows an urban scene which is an important factor as most human populations live in built-up areas. The end papers are striking in their depiction of a range of animal tracks that could disappear if we fail to act.   

  

The final two pages of the story invite children to take part in protecting wildlife in 5 steps and, they are introduced to other children who are making a difference. The Glossary is a fine addition as there are words in the text that will be new to many. The content is backed up by scientific research and data from those who understand the natural world. At no time do Layton’s words appear preachy or extreme in the face of this crisis. He has provided us with the tools for gentle activism and it is up to us to do the right thing?















Wednesday, 25 August 2021

Wednesday, 30 June 2021

Book Review for The day Fin Flooded the World written and illustrated by Adam Stower

My review for Adam Stower's new picture book, 'the day Fin Flooded the World' - hosted on the Arena Illustration website here

My A.O.I. Book Review can be found here.

This picture work is published by Andersen Press.

Adam Stower's work can be found here.




Friday, 20 July 2018

My Book Review for The Last Wolf by Mini Grey

The Last Wolf

Written and Illustrated by Mini Grey

ISBN: 978-0-857-55092-7

Published by Penguin Random House UK

Reviewed by Karl Andy Foster


Author website http://minigrey.com

Review

When I was a young boy, many decades ago I would collect my necessary items (stones, catapult, bubble gum and a bottle of pop) and go out first thing to explore the woods behind our house. The first page of this story took me right back to those carefree times when one did indeed hope to find wild animals.

Mini Grey has taken on Little Red Riding Hood, absorbed the story and repurposed the plot so it is more relevant for our present troubling times. She understands the reason for fables. All the characters are well defined and we care about them. Wolf, Lynx and Bear are fully realized charming creatures. The story has an ecological and conservation message that needs to be understood and acted upon.

The direct and graphic cover shows Little Red framed by a triangle and attired for adventure standing in the wood. Above her is the elegiac title, The Last Wolf. The end papers with their spikey green trees signal a fairytale within and this is so. We read a story within a story and flashbacks that are portents of the future. The serif text is crisp, informative and works mainly as captions. 

The sense of place and depth is evident in the paintings. The stand out spreads for me are when Little Red wanders deeper into the forest, when she enters the wolf’s tree cave, the flashback to the heyday of the forest and when the forest is surrounded by the houses. The visual storytelling doesn’t shy away from the realities of a polluted world and nature in crisis.

The split panel spreads work well with funny reveals at the start moving onto the flashbacks to the good old days in the middle and finally showing our impact on the natural world. Like her earlier work the illustrations have a spikey energy. Grey draws animals and trees exquisitely. She has great control over her line work and her autumnal colour palette. Yellows glow and blues show a cold encroaching civilisation. 

It is quite possible that The Last Wolfhas all the hallmarks to become a classic text. A previous winner of the Kate Greenaway Medal in 2007, Grey shows us the world as it is and how it might be. Our imaginations should be the only limitation for children and adults alike because we do need to identify solutions to these complex problems. I believe that for young children this book is a great place to start. 


17 July 2018








Friday, 21 July 2017

My AOI Book Review for 'The Bad Bunnies' Magic Show'

Written and Illustrated by Mini Grey


Published by Simon & Schuster http://www.simonandschuster.co.uk/books/The-Bad-Bunnies-Magic-Show/Mini-Grey/9781471157592

ISBN: 978-1-4711-5760-8


For my review go to this link http://www.theaoi.com/blog/?p=14157