View Cart   |   My Account

   Search products:  

 

 

 
 Toys
      Active & Outdoor Play
     Arts & Crafts
     Bath & Water Play
     Building

     Dolls & Plush
     Infant & Toddler
     Musical Instruments
     Pretend Play

     Science & Nature
     Skill Builders & Puzzles
     Vehicles & Trains

  Books & Language

     Board Books (0 - 4)
     Picture Books (3 - 7)
     Early Readers (5 - 8)
     Chapter Books (7+)

     Activities & Crafts
     Award Winners

     Education / Nonfiction
      Foreign Languages

      For Parents
 
  Music

      Children's Favorites
      Classical/Instrumental

      Folk

      Lullabies

      Multicultural

 
  Global Child
      Africa
      Asia
      Australia
      Europe
      Latin America

      US & Canada

 
 

 

    

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 


 Home/Books/Award Winners


The Man Who Walked Between the Towers

 

 

Written By:  Mordicai Gerstein

 

Price:  $17.95

 

 

AvailabilityUsually ships within 1 - 2 business days

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

view larger image

 

Product Details

 

Publisher:  Roaring Brook Press

Date Published:  March 2004

Format:  hardcover

Pages:  40 pages

Ages:  5 - 8

 

Reviews:

 

FROM THE PUBLISHER

 

In 1974, French aerialist Philippe Petit threw a tightrope between the two towers of the World Trade Center and spent an hour walking, dancing, and performing high-wire tricks a quarter mile in the sky. This picture book captures the poetry and magic of the event with a poetry of its own: lyrical words and lovely paintings that present the detail, daring, and -- in two dramatic foldout spreads -- the vertiginous drama of Petit's feat.

 

Publishers Weekly

 

This effectively spare, lyrical account chronicles Philippe Petit's tightrope walk between Manhattan's World Trade Center towers in 1974. Gerstein (What Charlie Heard) begins the book like a fairy tale, "Once there were two towers side by side. They were each a quarter of a mile high... The tallest buildings in New York City." The author casts the French aerialist and street performer as the hero: "A young man saw them rise into the sky.... He loved to walk and dance on a rope he tied between two trees." As the man makes his way across the rope from one tree to the other, the towers loom in the background. When Philippe gazes at the twin buildings, he looks "not at the towers but at the space between them.... What a wonderful place to stretch a rope; a wire on which to walk." Disguised as construction workers, he and a friend haul a 440-pound reel of cable and other materials onto the roof of the south tower. How Philippe and his pals hang the cable over the 140-feet distance is in itself a fascinating-and harrowing-story, charted in a series of vertical and horizontal ink and oil panels. An inventive foldout tracking Philippe's progress across the wire offers dizzying views of the city below; a turn of the page transforms readers' vantage point into a vertical view of the feat from street level. When police race to the top of one tower's roof, threatening arrest, Philippe moves back and forth between the towers ("As long as he stayed on the wire he was free"). Gerstein's dramatic paintings include some perspectives bound to take any reader's breath away. Truly affecting is the book's final painting of the imagined imprint of the towers, now existing "in memory"-linked by Philippe and his high wire. Ages 5-8. (Sept.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.


 

Awards:

 

Winner, 2004 Caldecott Medal










Copyright (c) 2004 - 2005. Inch by Inch Kids, Inc. All rights reserved.