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EL CUARTO TURQUESA / THE TURQUOISE ROOM

A rich portrayal of the passage of a family’s artistic talents across generations.

“The dreams of girls turn into the lives of women.”

A little girl named Esther, who lives in the Peru of a century ago, paints a map of South America that features her favorite color, turquoise, which she uses for “the color of rivers and lakes and the blue morpho butterflies that lived in the rain forest.” When she grows up and has a daughter of her own, Isabel, Esther paints the girl’s room turquoise, inspiring her to dream of flying across the world. Isabel finds a home in the United States and becomes an artist. The urge to dream big is passed on again, this time to Monica, Isabel’s daughter and the book’s author, who grows up to write stories for children and to raise two daughters of her own. This autobiographical, multigenerational tale is proof that a loving parent can encourage a child not only to embrace art, but also to view the world as a place of limitless opportunities. The book is bilingual, with Spanish first, English second, though some Spanish words and phrases such as mantas (blankets) and linda (beautiful) are retained in the English text. With illustrations that place realistic images of characters’ faces against deeply saturated greens and purples and the titular turquoise, the book feels like a whirlwind journey through 100 years of family history. In fact, it could stand to be a little longer; as beautiful as it is, it’s over as quickly as an elusive dream. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A rich portrayal of the passage of a family’s artistic talents across generations. (author’s note, map, photo) (Picture book. 4-7)

Pub Date: Sept. 27, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-89239-435-7

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Children's Book Press

Review Posted Online: July 26, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2022

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DRAW HERE

AN ACTIVITY BOOK

Brilliant as usual—but best suited for the shelves of personal libraries rather than public ones.

From the Press Here! (2011) panjandrum, a high-energy invitation to break out pens, pencils, and crayons for an instructive rumpus.

A brisk, directed tutorial in following instructions while having a barrel of fun, this workbook opens with a visual flex in the form of a flap of die-cut holes placed interestingly over a diverse set of patterns, then presents a hefty block of 140 drawing pages. These range from totally blank at the outset to busy spreads teeming with dots, circles, or other shapes in primary colors, and each comes with a prompt: to add dots or loops of specified size or in specified places; carefully color inside, or outside, the lines; connect dots of a certain color or particular relationship; turn dots into fruit, cars, fish, faces, and more; or mark everything up in some other way. Along the way motor skills get a workout too, as the interactions tend to progress from simple to less so: “Make these dots the same. / Now make them as different as can be!” Who knew there was so much one could do with red, yellow, and blue dots? Once they start, primary grade Picassos are going to find it hard to stop before the end, and as the pages aren’t erasable, do-overs aren’t in the picture.

Brilliant as usual—but best suited for the shelves of personal libraries rather than public ones. (Novelty. 4-6)

Pub Date: Sept. 17, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-4521-7860-8

Page Count: 140

Publisher: Chronicle Books

Review Posted Online: June 22, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2019

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THE BIG BOOK OF EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO GET THE JOB DONE

Kids should have some fun, but they won’t make a job of returning.

To do the job, you need the right stuff.

That’s the premise of this themed picture dictionary that displays tools, equipment, and apparel associated with different jobs. Illustrated in muted colors, the objects corresponding to the jobs are arranged and labeled on two-page spreads. Each spread includes an informative sidebar; additionally, kids are challenged to answer a question about each career. For instance, readers must select which tools a chef uses for measuring. (Answers to all questions are given at the end.) Some other occupations include artist, doctor, and mechanic. It is simple enough, but there are concerns with this title, originally published in Spanish, with numerous examples of off-the-mark labeling, such as “ceramic” and “antiquity” used to label pottery pieces on the “Artist” spread. A few spreads feature outdated items that will be unfamiliar: vinyl record and cassette player and tape; typewriter and film reel; floppy disk and a laughably passé cellphone. Some experiences are out of young children’s ken, so a few questions will be difficult to answer, and, on several pages, details get lost in gutters. Picture quizzes at the back require readers to find objects not belonging to the professions of depicted persons. Commendably, the illustrated workers are racially, ethnically, and nontraditionally gender diverse. Besides expanding vocabulary, the book develops the math skill of classifying.

Kids should have some fun, but they won’t make a job of returning. (Informational picture book. 4-7)

Pub Date: Oct. 22, 2019

ISBN: 978-3-7913-7404-8

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Prestel

Review Posted Online: Aug. 25, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2019

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