All the World

Hardcover
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Author: Liz Garton Scanlon

ISBN-10: 1416985808

ISBN-13: 9781416985808

Category: Nature

All the world is here.\ It is there.\ It is everywhere.\ All the world is right where you are.\ Now.\ Following a circle of family and friends through the course of a day from morning till night, this book affirms the importance of all things great and small in our world, from the tiniest shell on the beach, to warm family connections, to the widest sunset sky\ \ \ 2009 Parents' Choice Gold Award winner\

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All the world is here. It is there. It is everywhere. All the world is right where you are. Now. Following a circle of family and friends through the course of a day from morning till night, this book affirms the importance of all things great and small in our world, from the tiniest shell on the beach, to warm family connections, to the widest sunset skyThe New York Times - Andrew BastAll the World, [Scanlon's] second book, weaves a sumptuous and openhearted poem of 18 couplets over 38 pages, all revolving around the title's singsong refrain. The verses take readers from an unexplored beach to a busy music-filled family room and into a tranquil, moonlit night. Beautifully illustrated by Marla Frazee, who won a Caldecott Honor this year for A Couple of Boys Have the Best Week Ever, it's the kind of book that will be pulled off the shelf at bedtime over and over again.

\ From the Publisher"Charming illustrations and lyrical rhyming couplets speak volumes in celebration of the world and humankind, combining to create a lovely book that will be appreciated by a wide audience... Perfection." — School Library Journal STARRED\ "Tackling a topic no smaller than the world itself, Scanlon (A Sock Is a Pocket for Your Toes) and Frazee (A Couple of Boys Have the Best Week Ever) invite children to explore a variety of its settings, starting with a beach where a young interracial family plays. Frazee's warm, endearing vignettes...are a joyous counterpart to Scanlon's text. Together they create an empathic, welcoming whole." — Publishers Weekly, STARRED\ "Scanlon's text has a child-friendly simplicity reminiscent of Margaret Wise Brown...All the World will win audiences with a sensibility both timeless and thoroughly modern." — Horn Book Magazine, STARRED\ "It's hard to imagine a cozier and more spacious world. At once a lullaby and an invigorating love song to nature, families and interconnectedness." — Kirkus Reviews, STARRED\ "Liz Garton Scanlon and Marla Frazee capture the give-and-take between comfort and wonder in their exquisite new book All the World. ...Scanlon and Frazee pull it off with brilliant simplicity...Scanlon's verse and Frazee's illustrations play off one another like the music and lyrics of a great song. ... Don't miss this one." — The Washington News Tribune\ "... [a] shining, subtle craftsmanship that moves this title from merely enjoyable to genuinely inspired... In short, it's a moving and accessible celebration of the poetry of ordinary human life." — The Bulletin for the Center for Children's Books\ "All the World pulls off the most magical trick of picture books: To make a grand statement of mystery and wonder in the humble 36-page format of a few paintings and a handful of words." — Newsday\ "Liz Garton's gentle daylight-to-moonrise text reflects and respects this child-centric version of the universe even as it lulls young listeners with rhythms as gentle as waves....Against the backdrop of this almost ethereal text, Marla Frazee['s]...illustrations echo the rhythm of the verse, alternating between sweeping double-page panoramas and vignettes that mimic the motion of the words. Perfect." — The Washington Post Book World\ "There's a wonderful balanced imbalance between the sweeping largeness of the pictures and the spare script of perfectly chosen words." — The Chicago Tribune\ "All the small moments connect to a larger shared experience, Scanlon's (A Sock Is a Pocket for Your Toes) words and Frazee's pictures seem to say... Frazee lets out all the stops... Masterful." — Shelf Awareness\ \ \ \ \ \ Kristi JemtegaardTo children, "all the world" is who they know, what they see and where they are. Liz Garton's gentle daylight-to-moonrise text reflects and respects this child-centric version of the universe even as it lulls young listeners with rhythms as gentle as waves…The illustrations echo the rhythm of the verse, alternating between sweeping double-page panoramas and vignettes that mimic the motion of the words.\ —The Washington Post\ \ \ Andrew BastAll the World, [Scanlon's] second book, weaves a sumptuous and openhearted poem of 18 couplets over 38 pages, all revolving around the title's singsong refrain. The verses take readers from an unexplored beach to a busy music-filled family room and into a tranquil, moonlit night. Beautifully illustrated by Marla Frazee, who won a Caldecott Honor this year for A Couple of Boys Have the Best Week Ever, it's the kind of book that will be pulled off the shelf at bedtime over and over again.\ —The New York Times\ \ \ \ \ Publishers WeeklyTackling a topic no smaller than the world itself, Scanlon (A Sock Is a Pocket for Your Toes) and Frazee (A Couple of Boys Have the Best Week Ever) invite children to explore a variety of its settings, starting with a beach where a young interracial family plays: “A moat to dig, a shell to keep/ All the world is wide and deep.” Tucked into a corner of the scene is a farmer's market, which becomes the focus of a subsequent spread (“Tomato blossom, fruit so red/ All the world's a garden bed”). This clever linking of Frazee's blithesome watercolor and pencil-streaked illustrations echoes the book's larger goal: to show the world's connectivity. The lively verse is consistently reassuring, even as life's stumbling blocks get their moment (“Slip, trip, stumble, fall/ Tip the bucket, spill it all/ Better luck another day/ All the world goes round this way”). Frazee's warm, endearing vignettes—a mother studying with her baby, grandparents embracing in their bathrobes—are a joyous counterpart to Scanlon's text. Together they create an empathic, welcoming whole. Ages 3–7. (Sept.)\ \ \ \ \ Children's Literature\ - Ken Marantz and Sylvia Marantz\ A series of rhymed couplets in hand-lettered text flow across the wide double pages as we follow a young family through a day of discovering that "All the world is wide and deep." They dig in the sandy shore, choose a tree to plant at a farmers' market, sightsee, and are caught in a thunderstorm. They dry off and have dinner in a restaurant, then return home as the sun sets. Family members gather for a musical get-together and mutual enjoyment. The message of pleasure in the world around us is clearly stated: "All the world is everything. Everything is you and me. Hope and peace and love and trust/ All the world is all of us." The few words are caption-like, only pointing out objects or actions. Black Prisma color pencil and watercolors create attractive, sensitive illustrations. Some scenes are detailed, as in the farmers' market with stalls, pots of flowers, and families socializing. The vertical downpour is striking as we peer through the watery curtain at a deserted pond and empty landscape with a single beach ball to make the human connection. This strong, contented, happy, hopeful message is delivered both visually and verbally. Reviewer: Ken Marantz and Sylvia Marantz\ \ \ \ \ Kirkus ReviewsIn flowing rhyme, Scanlon zooms outwards from smallness to bigness: "Rock, stone, pebble, sand / Body, shoulder, arm, hand / A moat to dig, / a shell to keep / All the world is wide and deep." Watercolor-and-line illustrations show several beach close-ups of siblings playing before pulling back to reveal the seashore and cove. Next: "Hive, bee, wings, hum / Husk, cob, corn, / yum! / Tomato blossom, fruit so red / All the world's a garden bed." Close-up on people tending bees and plants, then a broad double-page spread of farmstands and fields. Frazee connects all scenes with black pencil lines of shading, texture and motion. Her gift at drawing postures graces every page as multicolored families climb trees, get drenched by rain, seek a lit cafe at twilight and play in a musical jam session. An occasional grumpy child and wailing baby prevents idealization, but it's hard to imagine a cozier and more spacious world. At once a lullaby and an invigorating love song to nature, families and interconnectedness. (Picture book. 2-5)\ \ \ \ \ Children's Literature\ - Loretta Caravette\ This DVD for the picture book, All the World, has brought together the right combination for a winning experience: a perfect narrator, lovely animation, nice sound effects, and a good story. All the World follows a family and friends over the course of a day, from morning till night. The story reveals the beauty in life in all things great and small; from a shell to the ocean, from the rain to a warm meal. This story comes alive, beginning with the narrator: Joanne Woodward, an actress of stage and screen. She adds warmth and subtle joy as she reads. Her inflections and tone unearths meaning and depth to the words but is not over dramatized. The animation is the same style as in the book. The use of full animation in bits and pieces helps to empathize key moments and action as the family moves from place to place and as we watch friends and their experience, too. The sound effects fill in those little gaps only when necessary. Hearing a child calling to her mother, and her mother responding adds to the warmth. However, these voices are in the background and are added strategically, as is the music enhancing the total experience. This is a wonderful DVD and one you'll want to show your child over and over again. Reviewer: Loretta Caravette\ \