Alison Lester «Imagine»

Это история про детское воображение, про то, как дети в своей игре переносятся в придуманные миры, оживляют их и наполняют, смешивая с повседневностью. Элисон вообще довольно часто использует этот прием приобщения и использования детского творчества в своих книгах — она педагог по образованию и призванию, много времени проводит с детьми, иногда даже привлекает к сотрудничеству. Например, в книге «Sophie Scott Goes South» (можно посмотреть несколько иллюстраций у нас на сайте), которая возникла после ее поездки по Антарктиде в качестве сотрудника образовательного проекта Australian Antarctic Arts Fellowship, она использовала работы детей, их зарисованные впечатления от ее рассказов об этой экспедиции.

И вот «Imagine» вся построена на этом вот детском «вообрази…». Каждый разворот предваряется небольшим стишком: «Давай с тобой представим, что попали в край чудовищ, где пикируют птеранодоны и крушат все трицератопсы, стегозавры носятся с топотом и скрежещут тираннозавры…». Из коробок и скотча дети сооружают незамысловатые костюмы — и в следующий момент оказываются в самых настоящих доисторических зарослях.

Michael Roher «My new granny»

Fini’s granny has changed. Before, she would comment on Fini’s strange hair styles, help her feed the ducks in the park, had traveled all over the world, and was an amazing cook. Now, Fini’s granny admires wacky hairdos, eats the bread crumbs meant for the ducks in the park, and does not travel or cook anymore. Eventually, Granny has to come live with Fini and her family because she needs to be watched, almost like a little child. She needs help dressing and washing, falls asleep underneath the kitchen table, and has a woman named Agatha that comes to care for her, like a babysitter. Fini is unsure of what to think of this “new” granny—she looks the same but she certainly acts like a completely different person.

My New Granny is a heartwarming and important story about a grandparent who is suffering from dementia and how a grandchild can learn to accept this change in personality in a loved one. With an estimated 5.4 million people affected by Alzheimer’s in the United States, this is an essential resource for many children who may have a grandparent suffering from this disease. Elisabeth Steinkellner’s text captures the thought process of children while Michael Roher’s simple yet evocative illustrations paint a realistic picture of how to cope with dementia in a family.

Lynne Cherry «When I’m sleepy»

In this quiet, gentle story, a little girl wonders what it would be like to sleep as various animals do. She imagines herself in a cozy nest with a bird, on a log with a turtle, in a bear’s den, hanging from a tree with a bat. At the end, the little girl is in her own bed, dozing off with the (stuffed) sleeping animals on a shelf beside her. The full-page and double-page illustrations are painted in softened but rich colors with pen-and-ink detail. Each animal is seen in its habitat, often with other animals and plant life. The scenes are warm and comforting. The brief text has a lulling effect, with just a few well-chosen words per page. A nice addition to bedtime story collections.

Beyond a doubt, the author and the artist possess intimate knowledge of small children. Creating a lulling bedtime audiovisual diversion, Howard’s story and Cherry’s pictures are mutually enhancing, revealing a child’s sleepy fantasies. She lies in bed and wishes she could curl up in a basket with a cat or in a downy nest with baby birds, sometimes hugged by a friendly raccoon in his hollow log. . . . The book should appeal to parents looking for ways to settle down active little boys and girls who will tune into the narrator’s imagination and lose themselves in the lovely, full-color dream scenes.

Nonny Hogrogian «The fearsome inn»

Two witches, who practice their evil trade on lost travellers, are banished through the wisdom of a student of the holy cabala, and the power of his magic chalk.
Impacted writing and resplendent illustration at the service of an authentically harrowing, distinctively satisfying story: it starts with Satan and ends with heavenly light, and you believe it. For many years Doboshova, the witch, and Lapitut, her half-devil husband, have preyed upon the travelers who come to their inn; as servants, they hold captive three girls, Reitze, Leitze and Neitze. On a stormy day, three young men arrive, and one among them, Leibel, a student of the cabala, has a magic gift, a piece of chalk that will imprison anyone in the circle he draws. While the three are washing before dinner, each has a nightmare; before they can take a bite of the food that will deprive them of all will, Leibel recognizes Doboshova and Lapitut as the witch and monster in his dream. By a ruse, he locks them in a circle of chalk, and the threats and ruses of all the evil spirits of the forest are of no avail: Leibel will not free them until they agree in blood to go away forever. This done, the six sort themselves out and marry quite satisfactorily (though all three girls wanted Leibel to start with). Leibel and Neitze remain at the inn, running it as a hostel, and in time it becomes known, through his studies, as the greatest academy of the cabala. The synopsis is and is not the story: always there is ancient magic pitted against ancient mischief, and an occasional turn of the screw. The drawings have to be seen, as does the book, impeccably produced down to paper and type; the story must be read, by adults as well as children, but best together.

Antony Groves-Raines «Hans Andersen’s Fairy Tales»

A beautifully illustrated compendium featuring 15 fairy tales by the master Danish storyteller. These include classics like The Nightingale, The Snow Queen, The Emperor’s New Clothes, and The Little Mermaid, as well as lesser known works such as The Swineherd, The Shepherdess and the Chimney-Sweep, and The Garden of Paradise.
Illustrated with 8 exquisite colour plates, plus many superb b&w drawings. Pastedowns and endpapers depict a lovely colour illustration of wild strawberries.

Bob Graham «The nine lives of Aristotle»

Dick King-Smith’s mischievous narrative and Bob Graham’s sweet, humorous watercolors capture the first eight lives of a kitten who’s ready to scamper his way into hearts everywhere.

Aristotle the kitten is so adventurous that it’s a good thing cats have nine lives. What’s even better is that Aristotle has found the kind witch Bella Donna to be his owner. Somehow she is always there when he gets into trouble, whether tumbling down the chimney, tipping over a giant milk jug, or tearing away from a snarling watchdog — just as a truck comes areening by. Is it luck? Or maybe a little bit of magic?

Mordicai Gerstein «The Man Who Walked Between the Towers»

История про бесстрашного французского канатоходца Филиппа Пети, бросившего канат между двумя башнями Всемирного торгового центра, чтобы танцевать над пропастью, вышла в 2003 году, вскоре после трагедии 11 сентября. Книга, ставшая своеобразным памятником разрушенным башням, получила множество наград в области детской книги (включая престижную Медаль Калдекотта), была адаптирована для кино и балета, а выдающийся американский мультипликатор Майкл Спорн снял по ней анимационный фильм.