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Phaidon, 2019 |
My first impulse with any books by Caldecott winner Chris Raschka is to rave. When it comes to reviewing, though, I force myself to be more objective.
The subtext of the title, SIDE BY SIDE: A Celebration of Dads, says it all. Each three-page-turn-stanza of this poetic celebration is a story unto itself. Each sequence suggests an extended experience, a pair of loving lives. With minimal words, not rhymed but perfectly chosen and paced to reveal the roles on both sides, we join the the father and the child as they interact in a variety of activities. A range of ethnicities, genders, and settings underscore the universality of these relationships.
Use your imagination to picture these examples:
Horse and rider
Queen and jester
Side by side
Mountain and climber
Dreamer and doer
Side by side
Now, try your best to view your mental pictures as interpreted by Chris Raschka: vibrant colors, loose and flowing swashes of color, soft edges, movement and action, expressive faces, and shifting perspectives on the page. The tall but narrow trim size provides ample room for soaring kites and scaled dad-kid images. The end papers are a delight: opening papers display the dad/kid hats from the interior, while final end papers do the same with the paired pairs of shoes from the interior stories.
From cover to cover, from head to toe, from scene to scene, this is a winner. I can hardly imagine a child or parent who would not embrace (literally, embrace) this book. It is an ideal gift book, of course, but it is equally suited to day-to-day reading and circulation in classroom, libraries, bookstores, families.
When reading about Raschka's inspiration for this book it reminds us, too, how adult children can use picture books as gifts to our own parents to say what our own words never seem to do as well.
This is a rave review, right?
Yes, it is, and it is well-earned.
A copy of this book was provided in exchange for an honest review.
Wow - the sounds good. I love seeing father-feel-good books for kids this age. And this would be a great book to gift one's dad with now. Mine left this Earth over 20 year ago of Early-onset Alzheimer's.
ReplyDeleteI send my comfort for your loss of your dad, no matter how long ago. I have learned, too, that after parents are gone they are never truly gone, but the longing to show them something or say something or ask something never goes away.
ReplyDeleteThis book really reminded me of the many days/years in which Dad would come home from work, exhausted, but take off his glasses, throw a quilt on the floor, and play monster in the middle with the four of us, or balance us on his knees while we recited nursery rhymes, or any number of other things that must have taken his very last ounce of energy for the day. Best investment ever. Thanks for commenting, Kathy.