Showing posts with label Sophie Blackall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sophie Blackall. Show all posts

Monday, September 11, 2017

MMGM: A Series of Unfortunate Events

Today's Marvelous Middle Grade Monday pick:

Books 1-13, A Series of Unfortunate Events
These covers are out of order!?!
A Series of 
Unfortunate Events

Written by Lemony Snicket
Cover by Brett Helquist
HarperCollins, 1999
Ages 8-12, Lexile 1010L
Avg 263 pages, Avg 41000 words


Themes:
Misfortune, Misery, Despair, Orphans


Opening:
"If you are interested in stories with happy endings, you would be better off reading some other book. In this book, not only is there no happy ending, there is no happy beginning and very few happy things in the middle. This is because not very many happy things happened in the lives of the three Baudelaire youngsters. Violet, Klaus, and Sunny Baudelaire were intelligent children, and they were charming, and resourceful, and they had pleasant facial features, but they were extremely unlucky, and most everything that happened to them was rife with misfortune, misery, and despair. I am sorry to tell you this, but that is how the story goes."


Thoughts:
A Series of Unfortunate Events follow the misadventures of three orphans as they unravel their parents mysterious past and their uncertain future. All the while they are pursued by a villain-to-end-all-villains, count Olaf. Though the later books were a bit plotless, and the ending was somewhat unsatisfying, the grim humor, inventive storytelling, and iconic Snicket style from dedication to jacket blurb are worth turning every page.

And now random tips:
Definitely start with The Bad Beginning. Read them in order. Don't skip the front and back matter including the dedication, the jacket blurbs, and the author's note. Seriously.
The Wide Window remains my favorite. The Grim Grotto my least. Hang in there. I thought the books lost a little steam by book 8, but 9 is hilarious.
You may want to take breaks in between. I found some of the humor loses its charm if you do all 550K-odd pages in a row.
Don't miss out on all the companion artwork by Brett Helquist. Also stop at his Etsy shop for some Baudelaire prints (some never before published!)
The cds are no substitute for the paper versions because many of the jokes depend on visual cues, but I do recommend the cds once you've read books 1-13. The author narrates his own audiobooks. His creepy deadpan isn't for everyone though, so the publisher rerecorded the series read by the unparalleled Tim Curry. (Have a handkerchief handy for his interpretation of Mr. Poe!)


Bonus: 
1. Our illustrious host, Shannon Messenger reviewed this series on her blog.

2. Want more Lemony Snicket madness? He has written plenty of other amazing books. I reviewed his fabulous picture book, The Composer is Deadillustrated by Carson Ellis.
Kitty Cat at the Library reviewed All the Wrong Questions, the first book in a different series. All the Wrong Questions has a different voice, but the same quirky bent, this time with a noir twist.

3. Other MMGM bloggers recommend
Deadweather and Sunrise, by Geoff Rodkey, cover by Iacopo Bruno
Rooftoppers, by Katherine Rundell, illustrated by Terry Fan
The 9 Lives of Alexander Baddenfield, by John Bemelmans Marciano, illustrated by Sophie Blackall
A Whole Nother Story, by Dr. Cuthbert Soup, illustrated by Jeffrey Timmins.

Deadweather and Sunrise,
The Chronicles of Egg #1
Reviewed by the Hopeful Heroine
Rooftoppers
Reviewed by Jenni Enzor

The 9 Lives of Alexander Baddenfield
Reviewed by Always in the Middle
A Whole Nother Story,
Reviewed by Shannon Messenger




Visit the Friday Drive-In review of  A Series of Unfortunate Events.
View all the Summer Drive-In reviews for 2017.

Check out all the recommended titles for Marvelous Middle Grade Monday for September 11, 2017 available on Shannon Messenger's Ramblings of a Wannabe Scribe.

Have you reviewed any Lemony Snicket books? Please leave your link in the comments below. Feel free to leave your other MG recommendations, too. Thanks!

Monday, November 16, 2015

Understanding Ourselves Through Books

"Why are picture books important? Because they show us the world. . . . We learn what it’s like to be someone other than ourselves, and in the process, come to understand ourselves better."
-Sophie Blackall*

Bookplate courtesy the Bilingual Librarian

*Via Picture Book Month

Monday, October 12, 2015

Joys of Parenthood

"When we’re very young . . . We fall in love with characters, and pore over every detail of their worlds. We hold our favorite books dear, and read them until we know them by heart. And when the time comes, we share them with our own children, which has to be one of the great joys in life." 
 -Sophie Blackall

Bookplate via Pinterest



*Via Picture Book Month 

Friday, October 10, 2014

PPBF: Are You Awake?

Today's Perfect Picture Book Friday pick

The first book which she both wrote and illustrated
Are You Awake?
Written and illustrated by Sophie Blackall
2011, Henry Holt,
ages 2-5, 40 pp.

Themes:
Bedtime, Patience, Relationships

Opening:
Mom? Mom?
Mom?
MMM?
Mom?
Yes, Edward?
Mom, are you awake?
Mm-mm. No.


Synopsis:
This sweet bedtime book chronicles a toddler's night-time wanderings and wonderings. He questions mom over and over while she tries to get a few more precious minutes of sleep. He wants to know why dad is flying a plane, why the sun isn't yet up, why , why, why? Mom tries unsuccessfully to get Edward to go back to sleep. She tries alternately answering, coaxing, playing games, and questioning him back. This is a quiet book about the playful (if somewhat reluctant) exchanges between mother and child. Perfect for anyone whose had a sleepless night because of a curious child.


What I Love:
I love that every aspect of this book was obviously planned. The size, shape, font styles and colors, layouts, illustrations, endpapers. It is a delight to hold.

I love the softness of the Chinese ink and watercolor illustrations.

It's 4 O'Clock. Do you know where your children are?
On a more literary level, Are You Awake? perfectly captures the responses of an exhausted parent. The boy's endless questions remind me of my own children. The ending makes me smile, and makes kids want to cray, "Again!"

I love the honest dialogue. Here's my favorite snippet:

Why aren't you awake?
Because I'm asleep.
Why are you asleep?
Because it's still nighttime.
Why is it still nighttime?
Because the sun hasn't come up yet.

Bonus:
by Kitchentreaty
1. Here's a nice interview with Sophie from Juana Martinez-Neal.
2. Here Sophie posts on her blog a bit about the inspiration for the book and what it took to get it published.
3. The Horn Book does a bang-up job on introducing the book and it's author on their website.
4. Take a sneak peek into Sophie's cabinet-of-curiosities-style home from Design Sponge.
5. Buy one of the artist's prints from her Etsy shop.
6. Every one of Sophie's books has a whale hidden in the illustrations in honor of Moby Dick. Can you find it?
7. Need some suggestions for over-active toddlers? Read these bedtime rituals from Parenting, KidsGrowth, and ivillage.
8. Try some soothing hot chocolate by the mug as a bedtime snack.
9. Look for these other Perfect Picture Books at your local library.

More Sophie Blackall
Reviewed by Wendy
A book about why
Reviewed by Kirsten













Who's stolen all the bedtime stories?
Reviewed by Julie
Lyrical bedtime tale
Reviewed by Catherine




More babies who can't sleep
Reviewed by Laura
Bedtime silliness
Reviewed by Clarike




Check out all the recommended titles for Perfect Picture Book Friday
for October 10, 2014 available on Susanna Leonard Hill's blog.