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ANGEL FACE by Sarah Weeks

ANGEL FACE

by Sarah Weeks & illustrated by David Diaz

Pub Date: April 1st, 2002
ISBN: 0-689-83302-4
Publisher: Atheneum

While picking blackberries with his mother, a little boy is enticed by a blue butterfly and wanders away. His mother persuades Old Crow to find the child and begins describing her Angel Face to him. Old Crow begins looking for the child with dusty almonds for eyes, a mango sliver for a mouth, and hair like a rushing river, but Old Crow can only find a little boy with a face that is “plainer than a cricket.” Not wanting to return to the distraught woman empty-handed, he wakes the boy and leads him back to her. She immediately embraces the little boy, repeating her claims of his beauty. She tells Old Crow, “I knew you’d know it anyplace, my Angel’s Face.” The rhyming couplets and rich, descriptive language make the text as beautiful as the artwork swirling around it. Richly colored illustrations rendered in pastel on textured paper fill each double-paged spread. With a nod to the folk-art tradition, the paintings could stand alone from the text They are softer than Caldecott Medalist Diaz’s (Roadrunner’s Dance, 2000, etc.) usual work and a perfect accompaniment. A CD by the author-songwriter is included. A tribute to the unique beauty of every child and the special love of a mother for her son. (Picture book. 3-7)