Beginning with several pages addressing general concepts (reminding readers to be creative and be willing to make mistakes and try again), it goes on to describe a bit about the history of collage as an art form, define tools, elements of composition, and techniques, using both pictures and words. After this general introduction, it provides step-by-step directions for six specific projects with lots of photo support for the directions. It also provides tips for preserving finished projects.
Author Archives: Courtney Morgan
Pippa at the Parade
Just a few rhyming words on each page, with bright illustrations capture a small child’s experience of the pageantry and excitement of watching a parade. It’s a fine little book for very small children, but nothing exceptional.
Writing for Benjamin: A story about autism
Told from the perspective of the older brother of a boy with autism, this story does a good job of describing some of the experiences, frustrations, and successes that autism brings to a family. I think it would be a useful tool to include in any library collection, to help others understand and cope with their own experiences of special needs children.
A Wonderful Week
A book intended for very young children, it’s designed to introduce the days of the week and the idea of journaling. Each 2-page spread holds 1 sentence telling what that day is for, accompanied by mixed-media illustrations. A page in the back offers parents/teachers conversation-starting questions for pre-schoolers. It’s a fine book for what it does, but there are others that do the same, and it has very limited audience appeal.
The Belly Button Fairy
It’s a rhyming tale describing how the Belly Button Fairy bestows 1 belly button on every newborn baby. It has words to a song in the back to the tune of “Yankee Doodle.” There will be some readers who will always be drawn to anything with “Fairy” in the title, but it doesn’t really have much else to recommend it.
Dinosaur Woods
I didn’t like it. It seems rather lame and disjointed: a group of forest friends build a dinosaur to save their patch of woods from a plastic trees factory, but instead save the woods because it turns out the friends are all extinct or endangered. It’s got cut-paper illustrations.
Father Grumble
Adapted from a folk song that dates from the 1500s, this picture book tells the story of a farmer who brags about his work being so much harder than his wife’s, until she swaps places with him and forces him to recognize how much more difficult her work is. Though the illustrations depict the couple in modern dress, it still holds a certain timelessness.
Raf
Ben’s favorite stuffed giraffe disappears one day, but sends a series of postcards telling about his travels, before returning just in time for Ben’s birthday. I wish it mentioned specific places Raf traveled to, so as to provide readers with geographical context. The only real humor comes when Ben is described as having to sleep all alone, without Raf, while the illustration shows a whole pile of other stuffed animals. It’s fine, I suppose, but there’s not really much to make it wonderful.
123 I Can Build
The page layouts are clean and crisp, with one project per 2-page spread. Projects use simple materials easily available. The instructions are written in text suitable for children to be able to follow them independently, well-supported with step-by-step photos. Vocabulary blurbs are added within the context of the project that illustrate them. The final project combines techniques introduced in all the others. My one criticism of the book (common among many craft books) is that the projects in the illustrations look like they were completed by grown-ups pretending to be kids — I worry that children will be disappointed if their own efforts do not produce such perfect results.
It’s a Thunderstorm
A basic weather book explaining thunderstorms, this book will be useful to teachers, but does not offer much to bring it to the attention or interest of recreational readers. It is adequate if you are in need of some materials to support your science curriculum, but I’m not sure you couldn’t find better.