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Alphabatics [Hardcover]

Suse MacDonald (Author, Illustrator)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

A is for ark. But did you know that if you turn an A upside down and round the point out a little, it becomes an ark?

B is for balloon. But did you know that if you blow it up really big, the hole in the middle floats away like a balloon?

In this wonderfully creative alphabet book, letters are pulled, twisted, reversed, and curled until they become part of what they represent. F becomes a fish, and Y becomes a yak!

Young readers will be fascinated with the way the letters evolve into the final creation. They'll never look at the alphabet the same way again!

--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Customers buy this book with Alphabet City (Caldecott Honor Book) $16.99

Alphabatics + Alphabet City (Caldecott Honor Book)
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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

An "A" is inverted and its sides plump up. Suddenly, it's an "Ark," floating on the high seas. The "C" falls over backwards and becomes the broad grin of a "Clown." When the lowercase "h" fills in, the first downstroke becomes a chimney and the hump peaks like the roof of a "house." MacDonald uses visual acrobatics to tease young ABC learners into looking at letters in an unusual way. Her graphics are set boldly against a pristine while background. The concept could take all the hard work out of learning the alphabet; some readers may be inspired to make their own attempts to convert letters into art. (All ages
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal

Kindergarten-Grade 3 An alphabet book that is imaginative, original, and bound to strike a creative note in children. Boldly colored upper- and lower-case letters appear at the top left of every page. Below them, each boxed animated letter jumps, dances, or gently sways to become a part of an object or a scene on the facing page, with one-word labels. MacDonald's A tilts, flops over, and literally becomes an ark as it turns itself around. An N turns over, glides up a tree trunk, and becomes a nest for three young birds. Crisp, fresh, and totally effective, it's a unique way of looking at the alphabet. This is a book to encourage creative thinking and for sheer enjoyment of MacDonald's precise graphics, rather than for object identification among the very young. A visual delight. Trev Jones, "School Library Journal"
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 64 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing (December 1, 1986)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0027615200
  • ISBN-13: 978-0027615203
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 11.1 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,095,095 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I can't remember when I first knew I was an artist, because it was something that happened gradually.

I grew up in Glencoe, Illinois. My father was a professor at Northwestern University. My mother was a writer. We spent summers on an old farm in Weston, Vermont. My first art teacher was Churchill Ettinger, a Vermont artist who showed me how to visually transfer and translate the world before me to my paper. I can't remember how long I studied with him but by the time I entered college, I knew that art would be a focus in my life.

Since both of the colleges I attended were liberal arts schools, the courses offered were in the fine arts. No one talked about commercial art. It was considered a waste of one's talents.

I didn't think much about all that then. I just took courses: life drawing, painting, printmaking, ceramics. I even made sculptures out of car parts. Nothing I tried felt quite right. I knew I was an artist but where did I fit?

After college, I married, and my husband Stuart and I settled in New York City. I decided to find a job using my artistic talents. After a number of interviews, I contacted Charles Halgren at Caru Studios and discovered that he hired artists to illustrate textbooks from time to time. That sounded like the perfect job for me, so I called him every two weeks for the next nine months. Finally, a new biology book came in and I was employed to do pen and ink illustrations for it.

I stayed at Caru for Five years. It was a wonderful time. The studio employed thirty artists, photographers, draftsmen, and even typesetters (This was before computers, and type was set by hand.). I learned all about the commercial side of art and discovered what a fascinating world it was.

Then my husband and I moved back to the family farm in Weston, Vermont, and took over a construction company. Our move came at a time when I was beginning to feel a lack of growth in my work. I'd done illustrations for all kinds of science texts and was uncertain what to do next. So I was enthusiastic about our move and our new business. I did some office work and architectural design work and drafting, and we raised two children.

However, as time went on, I needed new challenges. Somehow I was off the track. When my second child entered first grade, the time had come to quit my job and return to school. At first I thought I would become an architect. I was good at architectural design and as an architect I could continue to contribute to our business.

I looked around, found the Boston Architectural Center and went down for an interview. While I was visiting a class on that first evening, I realized very suddenly (it was like being hit by lightning) that it was not architecture that I wanted to study, it was illustration. So my search continued, but now I was looking at art schools.

I enrolled in two schools, the New England School of Art and Design and the Art Institute. By taking classes at both, I was able to organize three days of classes each week.

After I began my studies my focus shifted. I no longer wanted to draw things just as they were, I wanted to look at them in new ways: to abstract them. Bill Oakes, one of my teachers, gave me lots of encouragement in this new direction. He wanted his students to question and get away from thinking in preconceived ways. As I studied with him my work began to change.

I also enrolled in Marion Parry's class in children's book writing and illustration at Radcliffe. It was in that seminar that I really became involved in children's books and decided that was where I wanted to concentrate my energies.

After I completed my studies in Boston, I took my portfolio with a variety of picture and story ideas to New York for appointments with editors and art directors at publishing houses. I had a total of forty-seven interviews over a three year period. I kept offering different ideas and suggestions for books. None was taken. But the situation changed with Alphabatics.

I showed the illustrations for just three letters, A, B, and E, to Bradbury Press, a Macmillan imprint. The idea was accepted, and my career as a children's book illustrator began.

Alphabatics is an idea that came to me while taking topography in art school. In the course, I worked exclusively with letter forms, shrinking and expanding them and manipulating their shapes in various ways. I was intrigued by the process and felt there were possibilities for a book. However, it was several years before I worked out the idea.

Publishing Alphabatics, my first, was very exciting. The book was well received and won two prestigious awards: a Caldecott Honor presented by the American Library Association and The Golden Kite Award presented by the Society of Children's Book Writers.

Since Alphabatics I have written and illustrated many books for children, including, most recently, Fish Swish, Spalsh Dash!, a counting book; Shape by Shape and Alphabet Animals for Simon and Schuster's Little Simon imprint. Alphabet Animals won the NAPPA gold medal in 2008, and received first prize in the novelty division at the 2009 New York Book Show.

A great pleasure for me is encouraging readers to go beyond their usual stopping points and make their own artistic discoveries. "Children are inventors, They thrive on situations that bring out that quality of inventiveness." In books like Alphabet Animals, I create opportunities for imagination and originality.

 

Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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4 star:
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3 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Letters as acrobats?, September 14, 2004
By 
This review is from: Alphabatics (Paperback)
In Suse MacDonald's 1987 Caldecott Honor Book Alphabatics, letters transform acrobatically from letters into objects that illustrate the letter and its sound. By way of an introduction, an "A" in a boxed frame grows arms and legs and vaults out of its box across the first pages of the book until it becomes an acrobat perched on the title on the title page. In later pages, an "i" splits in half, spreads its wings, and transforms into an insect; an "r" sprouts feathers and grows a beak, becoming a rooster; a "Y" bulges and transforms into the head and horns of a yak. Each letter of the alphabet receives a two-page spread. The upper- and lower-case letters are printed in a bold sans serif font in the upper left corner of the left-hand page. Just beneath, either the upper- or lower-case first appears unaltered in a box and its transformation is shown step-by-step across to the pages. The final object is shown on the right-hand page along with the word. The illustrations are comprised of bright blocks of color, presented on a crisp white background. The treatment of the alphabet is letter-focused and demonstrates to children just beginning to recognize letters that letters are special shapes that transform into words and meaning.
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5.0 out of 5 stars great book for preschoolers, September 20, 2011
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This review is from: Alphabatics (Hardcover)
I have a daycare in my home and read as much as possible to my little people...this book has always been a favorite with ages 0-5 ...they love that they can actually "read" it. I bought this hard back copy for my own grandson. I have worn out about 4 paperbacks.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Fun & imaginative concept book for young children, November 16, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Alphabatics (Hardcover)
This Caldecott Honor Book (1987) is very cleverly done. Children learn the letters of the alphabet and enjoy "watching" the letters morph into many different objects, animals, and birds. This book keeps the preschooler next door entertained every time she picks it up.
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