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Flostsam
Written By: David
Wiesner
Illustrated by Doug Cushman
Price: $17.00
Availability: Usually ships within
1 - 2 business days
Product Details
Publisher: Clarion
Date Published: September 2006
Format: hardcover
Pages: 40 pages
Ages: 4 - 8
Reviews:
From School Library Journal
Starred Review. Kindergarten-Grade 4
A wave deposits an old-fashioned contraption at the feet of an inquisitive young beachcomber. Its a Melville underwater camera, and the excited boy quickly develops the film he finds inside. The photos are amazing: a windup fish, with intricate gears and screwed-on panels, appears in a school with its living counterparts; a fully inflated puffer, outfitted as a hot-air balloon, sails above the water; miniature green aliens kowtow to dour-faced sea horses; and more. The last print depicts a girl, holding a photo of a boy, and so on. As the images become smaller, the protagonist views them through his magnifying glass and then his microscope. The chain of children continues back through time, ending with a sepia image of a turn-of-the-20th-century boy waving from a beach. After photographing himself holding the print, the youngster tosses the camera back into the ocean, where it makes its way to its next recipient. This wordless books vivid watercolor paintings have a crisp realism that anchors the elements of fantasy. Shifting perspectives, from close-ups to landscape views, and a layout incorporating broad spreads and boxed sequences, add drama and motion to the storytelling and echo the photographic theme. Filled with inventive details and delightful twists, each snapshot is a tale waiting to be told. Pair this visual adventure with Wiesners other works, Chris Van Allsburgs titles, or Barbara Lehmans The Red Book (Houghton, 2004) for a mind-bending journey of imagination.–Joy Fleishhacker, School Library Journal
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All
rights reserved.
From Booklist
PreS-Gr. 2. As in his Caldecott Medal Book Tuesday (1991), Wiesner offers
another exceptional, wordless picture book that finds wild magic in quiet,
everyday settings. At the seaside, a boy holds a magnifying glass up to a
flailing hermit crab; binoculars and a microscope lay nearby. The array of
lenses signals the shifting viewpoints to come, and in the following panels, the
boy discovers an old-fashioned camera, film intact. A trip to the photo store
produces astonishing pictures: an octopus in an armchair holding story hour in a
deep-sea parlor; tiny, green alien tourists peering at sea horses. There are
portraits of children around the world and through the ages, each child holding
another child's photo. After snapping his own image, the boy returns the camera
to the sea, where it's carried on a journey to another child. Children may
initially puzzle, along with the boy, over the mechanics of the camera and the
connections between the photographed portraits. When closely observed, however,
the masterful watercolors and ingeniously layered perspectives create a clear
narrative, and viewers will eagerly fill in the story's wordless spaces with
their own imagined story lines. Like Chris Van Allsburg's books and Wiesner's
previous works, this visual wonder invites us to rethink how and what we see,
out in the world and in our mind's eye. Gillian Engberg
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Awards:
Winner, 2007 Caldecott Medal