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Describe your new book. Oddfellow's Orphanage is a series of stories/vignettes that tell the tale of the newest arrival to a curious orphanage, a... Continue »
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    Oddfellow's Orphanage

    Emily Winfield Martin 9780375869952

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The Little Red Fish

The Little Red Fish Cover

 

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

A little boy enters a library with his grandfather and his little red fish at his side. But when he awakes after falling asleep amidst the library shelves, his fish is missing. Could his little friend have disappeared into that red book over there on the shelf?

Join us in celebrating this stunning debut by first-time illustrator Taeeun Yoo. With dreamlike qualities of early Maurice Sendak and fine etchings that strongly evoke the mysterious and the magical, The Little Red Fish pays homage to imagination and the power of a good book.

Review:

"Newcomer Yoo's sepia-toned pen-and-inks and watercolor wash, rich with shadows and spidery figures, provide a haunting obligato for her story of a boy's adventure alone in a deserted library. The cloth-covered, jacketless book and handsewn pages suggest the attention to detail and craft found within. Falling asleep among the shelves after his grandfather, the librarian, leaves the room, young JeJe wakes in the moonlight to find that his beloved red fish (which he carries about in a goldfish bowl) has disappeared. 'He caught a glimpse of a little red tail flipping high over a shelf and so he followed it.' Movement from one of the books on the shelf catches his eye. Inked in vermilion, the red fish and the red book stand out against the neutral background, as a series of wordless spreads follows. JeJe takes the book down, opens it, and is greeted by a fountain of fish just like his. Diving in, he travels through a wintry landscape, then sails across an ocean with a flock of flamingos in an image that recalls Japanese silkscreen landscapes. He and his fish land safely in the library just as JeJe's grandfather returns to fetch him. 'He whispered to his fish that they would come back to the library very soon.' Like Barbara Lehman's work, of which her fans might be reminded here, Yoo's exhilarating visual images don't really need words. They seem to call to a place beyond language, and shutting the book feels like awakening from a dream. Ages 4-up." Publishers Weekly (Starred Review) (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)

Synopsis:

With dreamlike qualities of early Maurice Sendak and fine etchings that strongly evoke the mysterious and magical, this stunning debut pays homage to the imagination as it tells the story of a little boy who goes in search of his little red fish in a library. Full color.

About the Author

Taeeun Yoo lives in New York City.

Product Details

ISBN:
9780803731455
Publisher:
Dial
Subject:
Humorous Stories
Illustrator:
Yoo, Tae-Eun
Author:
Yoo, Tae-Eun
Author:
Yoo, Tae-Eun
Subject:
Imagination & Play
Subject:
Books & Libraries
Subject:
Magic
Subject:
Fishes
Subject:
Libraries
Publication Date:
20070301
Binding:
Hardback
Grade Level:
from P up to AND UP
Language:
English
Illustrations:
YES
Pages:
40
Dimensions:
9.22x7.30x.34 in. .57 lbs.
Children's Book Type:
Picture / Wordless
Age Level:
04-08
The Little Red Fish
0 stars - 0 reviews
$ In Stock
Product details 40 pages Dial Books - English 9780803731455 Reviews:
"Publishers Weekly Review" by , "Newcomer Yoo's sepia-toned pen-and-inks and watercolor wash, rich with shadows and spidery figures, provide a haunting obligato for her story of a boy's adventure alone in a deserted library. The cloth-covered, jacketless book and handsewn pages suggest the attention to detail and craft found within. Falling asleep among the shelves after his grandfather, the librarian, leaves the room, young JeJe wakes in the moonlight to find that his beloved red fish (which he carries about in a goldfish bowl) has disappeared. 'He caught a glimpse of a little red tail flipping high over a shelf and so he followed it.' Movement from one of the books on the shelf catches his eye. Inked in vermilion, the red fish and the red book stand out against the neutral background, as a series of wordless spreads follows. JeJe takes the book down, opens it, and is greeted by a fountain of fish just like his. Diving in, he travels through a wintry landscape, then sails across an ocean with a flock of flamingos in an image that recalls Japanese silkscreen landscapes. He and his fish land safely in the library just as JeJe's grandfather returns to fetch him. 'He whispered to his fish that they would come back to the library very soon.' Like Barbara Lehman's work, of which her fans might be reminded here, Yoo's exhilarating visual images don't really need words. They seem to call to a place beyond language, and shutting the book feels like awakening from a dream. Ages 4-up." Publishers Weekly (Starred Review) (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)
"Synopsis" by , With dreamlike qualities of early Maurice Sendak and fine etchings that strongly evoke the mysterious and magical, this stunning debut pays homage to the imagination as it tells the story of a little boy who goes in search of his little red fish in a library. Full color.
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