Wednesday, September 28, 2011

BIG!

Dear Annie,

Ah yes, two years old: Isabel's definitely bigger all the time.

Do you know
Little Gorilla
, by Ruth Bornstein?  Little Gorilla lives in the forest and is loved by all the animals he meets.  Then one day he starts to grow (we see animals looking up, off-page), and he ends up BIG.  All his friends come to his birthday party, and they all still love him.  It sounds ridiculously simple-minded, but it's sweet too.

I wanted to look at some big-as-life books today.  First, there's
Life-Size Zoo
, by Kristin Earhart (editor) and Toyofumi Fukuda (photographer).   It's big: 14 inches high and 20 inches wide when it's open, but some pages fold out one more time, giving you a 40-inch wide panorama.  and what you're looking at is a picture of an elephant, a tapir, a koala, or a hedgehog printed in the size it would be in real life.  A giraffe with its tongue sticking out spans the whole width.  And a tiger, at 20 inches across, sure is big:

life-size
Lots more about this book and two others by the same folks at a blog called Bookie-Wookie, featuring a dad and kids talking about what they've been reading.

Then there's the amazing Steve Jenkins, who creates lots of stunning non-fiction books illustrated with cut-paper collages.  In
Actual Size
he does with collage what Fukuda did with photos. The gorilla's hand on the cover (book is 12 inches high) makes anyone -- grown-up or child -- feel small.  And when an animal is too big for the page, we get wonderful detail.  I had no idea a giant squid's eye is bigger than a gorilla's hand!  Here's more at Jenkins' website.

Animal Faces by Kyoko Toda and Akira Satohis, is alas, out of print -- although I've just ordered a copy sent to you from alibris for Isabel's birthday.  The picture on the cover is of a life-size wombat -- harking back to an earlier wombat entry here.  But the beauty of this book is in the smaller photographs inside.  Every two-page spread has 21 photographs of one species of animal: gorillas, tigers, camels, elephants, etc.  The beauty of it is that each photograph is of a different individual.  Kids of many different ages can get lost in comparing all the different faces.  Check out the rhinos:


I bought as many copies as I could find of this great book when it went out of print, so that I could keep selling them.  It took about a year to run through them all, and now I miss it.  I hope it's a hit at your house.

Love,

Deborah

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