"The Arrival" gives the exact opposite. Now the book gives the images and the reader has to build the words around it. It's a curious case (not unique, I'm sure, but special), best described as similar to a silent movie. Indeed, reading "The Arrival" often feels like watching a movie except that there's still something particularly "bookish" about it. Perhaps the still shots help. Reading it, I needed to fill in the blanks in a way that a movie would ask less of me. It's a difficult book to classify.
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Monday, November 2, 2009
Picture books
"The Arrival" gives the exact opposite. Now the book gives the images and the reader has to build the words around it. It's a curious case (not unique, I'm sure, but special), best described as similar to a silent movie. Indeed, reading "The Arrival" often feels like watching a movie except that there's still something particularly "bookish" about it. Perhaps the still shots help. Reading it, I needed to fill in the blanks in a way that a movie would ask less of me. It's a difficult book to classify.
I too was amazed when I first read this book. As a graduate student in the library program, we are required to read a wide variety of children's and young adult literature, and this book was one of the assigned.
ReplyDeleteThat is pretty cool, and the pictures look enchanting.
ReplyDeleteI've had this book for a couple of years now and still haven't read it. Mea culpa. I need to get on that.
ReplyDelete