Publisher's Hardcover ©2018 | -- |
Stories without words.
Sleep. Juvenile fiction.
Sleep. Fiction.
Bedtime. Fiction.
Night. Fiction.
Stories without words.
Many visual stories play out during the night, between the time that a child falls asleep and then awakens.This winner of the 2015 Silent Book Contest at the Bologna Book Fair may be wordless, but it overflows with stories. It demands that its viewers take their time going through the pages—and then going through them again. The beginning is simple: a light-skinned child falls asleep as an adult woman reads from a book whose cover sports stylized, anthropomorphic animals cavorting around a bonfire. Over several successive pages, the scene pans steadily outward—as with a wide-lens camera—so viewers see the child's home situated in an urban neighborhood, and then more and more of that neighborhood. Against a backdrop of a starry sky, windows and rooftops of buildings reveal the child's caregivers embracing, a nurse and patients in a hospital, an artist at an easel, and much more. As the angle widens, more characters emerge, and the initial stories continue. Art emerges on the easel; a crying baby finally sleeps; creatures resembling the bedtime book's characters leave the city and paddle away on a long boat whose brilliant orange-and-gold pattern matches the sleeping child's bedspread. Before the sophisticated, mixed-media artwork returns to the cityscapes, there are several joyous, vividly colored pages showing the creatures celebrating the night and the ensuing daybreak.Alluring, wordless enchantment. (Picture book. 4-9)
ALA Booklist (Fri Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2017)In this wordless picture book, a young child falls asleep after listening to a bedtime story. Downstairs, his parents share glasses of wine, while neighbors partake in their own activities: eating dinner, taking a shower, painting a picture, stargazing, walking a dog, and working a hospital night shift. Meanwhile, six colorfully dressed animals (resembling characters from the bedtime story) paddle a canoe to a party in the jungle. When the sun rises, the child awakens to smiling parents and a new day. First published in Italy, this won the 2015 Silent Book Contest. Johnson's mixed-media illustrations feature brilliant colors, stylized shapes, and many details to pore over. The story begins with a tightly focused spread of mother and child and then, over several pages, pans outward to encompass the entire neighborhood. Blue and violet hues predominate, accented with fuchsia and teal. This is definitely a candidate for repeated viewings, and hopefully it won't encourage young listeners to stay up late to take part in all this fun.
Horn Book (Mon Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2019)In this wordless, oversize picture book, a sleeping child's dream comes to life in sweeping, intricate full-spread illustrations. Cityscapes give way to a wilderness when animal characters from the child's bedtime story head out on a Sendak-reminiscent wild rumpus; from the tantalizing open windows to a sky full of twinkling stars and a forest lush with curling plants, this Italian import is a visual delight.
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)Many visual stories play out during the night, between the time that a child falls asleep and then awakens.This winner of the 2015 Silent Book Contest at the Bologna Book Fair may be wordless, but it overflows with stories. It demands that its viewers take their time going through the pages—and then going through them again. The beginning is simple: a light-skinned child falls asleep as an adult woman reads from a book whose cover sports stylized, anthropomorphic animals cavorting around a bonfire. Over several successive pages, the scene pans steadily outward—as with a wide-lens camera—so viewers see the child's home situated in an urban neighborhood, and then more and more of that neighborhood. Against a backdrop of a starry sky, windows and rooftops of buildings reveal the child's caregivers embracing, a nurse and patients in a hospital, an artist at an easel, and much more. As the angle widens, more characters emerge, and the initial stories continue. Art emerges on the easel; a crying baby finally sleeps; creatures resembling the bedtime book's characters leave the city and paddle away on a long boat whose brilliant orange-and-gold pattern matches the sleeping child's bedspread. Before the sophisticated, mixed-media artwork returns to the cityscapes, there are several joyous, vividly colored pages showing the creatures celebrating the night and the ensuing daybreak.Alluring, wordless enchantment. (Picture book. 4-9)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Painted in brilliant folk-art hues, Argentinian illustrator Johnson-s wordless story starts with a view through a window. Inside, a mother reads to her golden-haired son, then tiptoes away after he falls asleep. Now the view pulls back: the boy-s parents share wine downstairs, a girl cycles by, and a jaguar and a deer play music together on a nearby rooftop. The view again widens to reveal more buildings-the city night is alive with activity, and the two brightly colored animals are joined by four more. (Observant readers may have spotted them earlier in the story.) They strike out across a placid sea in a red dugout and head for a primeval wilderness, where they light torches and make a bonfire in the dark. At last their dancing makes the bonfire rise up into the sky: it-s the morning sun. Back in the city, the boy awakens. The story-s easy slide from reality to myth and back again recalls the magical realism of authors like García Márquez-and more stories are hinted at in the windows that fill the boy-s neighborhood. Ages 3-5.
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
ALA Booklist (Fri Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2017)
Horn Book (Mon Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2019)
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
While you are sleeping, does the rest of the world sleep, too?
Not everyone.
In this dreamy book, which won the 2015 Silent Book Contest at the prestigious Bologna Children's Book Fair, Mariana Ruiz Johnson conjures up the ordinary yet extraordinary world outside the window of a sleeping child. Some people are working. Some people are eating. Some are walking their dogs, others are watching the stars. And some are setting off on an adventure that might inspire an artist to create a book. As magical as the night sky, readers will return to Mariana Ruiz Johnson's illustrations again and again, finding new stories each time they visit.