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2 copies ordered
Published
US : Transit Children's Editions 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Azul López (-)
ISBN
9798893380286
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

López's impressionistic paintings emphasize human smallness against nature's vastness in this ruminative story about a man "always contemplating the things above his head." Initially, a protagonist, portrayed with brown skin, attempts "to make the others look up to see what he saw." But their indifference spurs him into doubt, and he joins them in the construction of an enormous scaffolding upon which they appear as small as worker ants before a full moon. One night, the man becomes lost while walking and encounters a spread-filling black hole, as visually striking as the bright moon. When he screams into this abyss, thousands of colorful birds emerge, covering the hilly landscape with a "tornado of feathers" and finally provoking the skyward appreciations the protagonist originally sought from peers. Visually articulating the natural world's perspective-altering capabilities, scenes are frequently conveyed using wide-angle views or aerial overheads. Against a primarily earth-toned palette, the birds scatter across pages like multicolored confetti in this soaring celebration of the virtues of looking up. An afterword connects the story to Mexico's Cave of Swallows. Ages 4--8. (Sept.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Originally published in Spain, a meditation on the rewards of pausing to notice beauty in one's surroundings. Clad in white work clothes, a straw hat at his side, a brown-skinned man with "an enormous curiosity about the sky" sits in the grass gazing above at the pale blue expanse, overlaid with cottony clouds. On the right-hand side of this double-page spread, a parade of workers dressed like him march into the distance. Eventually, the crew begin working, ignoring their comrade. Lush, textured, pastoral scenes, rendered in oil, pastel, charcoal, and colored pencil, give way to images of tiny figures creating skeletal structures. Amid his peers' indifference, the protagonist's curiosity "wither[s]," and he joins the others. A dramatic composition of bodies silhouetted against a full moon gives way to a parallel scene of a huge, circular hole in the ground, which the main character stumbles upon. Something stirs within, and he emits a primal scream into the black abyss. In a marvel of colorful, pointillistic patterns, thousands of birds emerge, moving in clusters across the pages, their music and "windstorm" enticing the laborers to look up. An endnote explains that this phenomenon happens daily in Mexico's Cave of Swallows. Children will empathize with the protagonist, torn between following his personal longing and going with the group mentality. Sensitively translated from Spanish, López's text provides an elegant accompaniment to the author/illustrator's arresting art. A story that feeds the spirit.(Picture book. 5-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.