The Last Goodbye
Autor Yuan Panen Limba Engleză Hardback – 14 mai 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780990973300
ISBN-10: 0990973301
Pagini: 30
Ilustrații: black & white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 58 x 227 x 213 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: Green Writers Press
Colecția Green Writers Press
ISBN-10: 0990973301
Pagini: 30
Ilustrații: black & white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 58 x 227 x 213 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: Green Writers Press
Colecția Green Writers Press
Recenzii
The Last Goodbye was chosen by an international jury as one of the eight finalists at the Silent Book Contest of the Bologna Children's Book Fair in 2014, and was exhibited in Montereggio di Mulazzo and then in Milan, Italy. -- Bologna Children's Book Fair
The Last Goodbye is a stunning, wordless picture book for children, adults, art students and collectors. The gorgeous book has a potential audience in the hospice community where caregivers, such as myself, will find it a useful tool for communication around the often difficult subject of death and dying. -- Claire Willis, author of Lasting Words: A Guide to Finding Meaning Toward the Close of Life
An artist makes his children's book debut with a wordless tale about losing a parent that delivers an emotional wallop. The artist uses panoramic and close-up views in sepia tones to convey the passage of time. A landscape view of clustered rooftops places readers in China. A quartet of scenes shows father and son preparing a simple meal, chopping and stirring, then sitting together at a wooden table, eating with chopsticks. The father sees his son to the bus stop, then waves goodbye, as the young man watches through the bus's rear window. Pan brilliantly telegraphs the passage of time by repeating the father's wave in all seasons, in a suite of four views that stretch across the center of a double-page spread. His art calls to mind Shaun Tan's work in The Arrival as the son, now a man, travels overseas by plane to an alien land of staircases with mysterious endpoints and serpentine highways. A quartet of images of a single tree through the four seasons creates a visual resonance with the father's farewell wave in the previous four-part suite. And then, a late-night phone call summons the son home, over the clustered rooftops, to his bedridden father. Pan's paring back to the barest of images and his careful use of repetition create layers of complexity. The father's constant presence results in Pan's delivery of an emotional wallop when his hero must face the man's absence. Readers will eagerly anticipate the next project from this talented artist and storyteller. -- Jennifer M. Brown, children's editor, Shelf Awareness
The Last Goodbye is a stunning, wordless picture book for children, adults, art students and collectors. The gorgeous book has a potential audience in the hospice community where caregivers, such as myself, will find it a useful tool for communication around the often difficult subject of death and dying. -- Claire Willis, author of Lasting Words: A Guide to Finding Meaning Toward the Close of Life
An artist makes his children's book debut with a wordless tale about losing a parent that delivers an emotional wallop. The artist uses panoramic and close-up views in sepia tones to convey the passage of time. A landscape view of clustered rooftops places readers in China. A quartet of scenes shows father and son preparing a simple meal, chopping and stirring, then sitting together at a wooden table, eating with chopsticks. The father sees his son to the bus stop, then waves goodbye, as the young man watches through the bus's rear window. Pan brilliantly telegraphs the passage of time by repeating the father's wave in all seasons, in a suite of four views that stretch across the center of a double-page spread. His art calls to mind Shaun Tan's work in The Arrival as the son, now a man, travels overseas by plane to an alien land of staircases with mysterious endpoints and serpentine highways. A quartet of images of a single tree through the four seasons creates a visual resonance with the father's farewell wave in the previous four-part suite. And then, a late-night phone call summons the son home, over the clustered rooftops, to his bedridden father. Pan's paring back to the barest of images and his careful use of repetition create layers of complexity. The father's constant presence results in Pan's delivery of an emotional wallop when his hero must face the man's absence. Readers will eagerly anticipate the next project from this talented artist and storyteller. -- Jennifer M. Brown, children's editor, Shelf Awareness