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Carnival of the Animals with CD: Poems Inspired by Saint-Saëns' Music
 
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Carnival of the Animals with CD: Poems Inspired by Saint-Saëns' Music [Hardcover]

Judith Chernaik (Editor), Satoshi Kitamura (Illustrator)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

6 and up1 and up
A 55-minute CD of music and poetry included inside!

Ladies and gentlemen, take your seats for CARNIVAL OF THE ANIMALS! Tap your feet, clap your hands, let the words flow and the music swell, and allow these poems and pictures to transport you. Inspired by Saint-Saëns’ famous "zoological fantasy," this magnificent book combines specially commissioned work by thirteen acclaimed modern poets with bold and glorious illustrations by Satoshi Kitamura.

The accompanying fifty-five-minute CD, performed by the Apollo Chamber Orchestra, features a reading of each of the fourteen poems followed by the appropriate musical passage, beautifully evoking for young listeners each of the animals in Saint-Saëns’ famous 1886 fantasy for two pianos and orchestra. Exciting poems by an international array of poets and riotous images by the award-winning Satoshi Kitamura illustrate CARNIVAL OF THE ANIMALS by Camille Saint-Saëns.


Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Kindergarten-Grade 8-Saint-Saëns's playful musical fantasy is well paired with Kitamura's menagerie of art and poems by 13 distinguished poets. Children can easily listen along since the CD offers a reading of each poem, followed by its corresponding musical passage from Carnival of the Animals. The recording concludes with a complete, uninterrupted performance of the piece by the Apollo Chamber Orchestra. The art and poems mesh seamlessly with the music. The first poem, James Berry's Lion, explains that the lion is a Wild beast outdoing all/eagles flying, whales swimming. But despite his skill at the hunt, the big cat is confronted with the question: Do your good looks, your mane of hair,/conceal your loneliness? A double-paged illustration depicts a large and powerful animal, alone, staring directly at readers with the other animals, at a distance, beneath him. X. J. Kennedy's exacting verse in Aquarium matches the dreamy quality of gazing inside this glass house: Flashes of fishes, quick flicks of tails./Scoot scurry scamper of scattering scales./A sponge blows bubbles, sea horses race,/Anemones wave tentacles of slow pink lace. Kitamura makes use of saturated colors and bold black ink statements in many of the pen-and-ink with watercolor art. For The Swan, however, subdued pastels with elegant lines mirror Charles Causley's lyrical poem that begins It is a music of the eye. The swan/Assumes the heavy garment of the stream-¦. Because the poems present various levels of sophistication, children will grow with many of them.-Teresa Pfeifer, Alfred Zanetti Montessori Magnet School, Springfield, MA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* K-Gr. 3. Chernaik commissioned 13 poets to respond to the musical animal portraits in Saint-Saens' kid-friendly Carnival of the Animals, and while few of the mostly British contributors will be known to young people, their concise, vibrant word painting will forge an instant connection with children. Highlights include Kit Wright's "Cocks and Hens," imagining a heated exchange between a rooster and his fed-up flock ("He thinks he can fly / Like an eagle or a hawk, / But he's just a feathered fathead / With a very silly walk!"); and X. J. Kennedy's evocative "Aquarium," capturing the shimmering motion of the music. Gerard Benson's interpretation of braying donkeys, which casts Saint-Saens' "Personages with Long Ears" as curmudgeonly music critics, jars against the child-oriented focus of the rest of the poems, most of which can be appreciated with or without the accompanying 55-minute CD of music and readings. Having said that, separating this from its inspirational basis would miss the point; children will find it fascinating to see how their own impressions of the original works match the poets'--not to mention illustrator Kitamura's, whose engaging watercolors shift fluidly among the poems' many moods while lending the whole a welcome cohesion. Jennifer Mattson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 6 and up
  • Hardcover: 32 pages
  • Publisher: Candlewick (March 14, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 076362960X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0763629601
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 0.4 x 9.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,117,226 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Animalia Musicale, May 4, 2006
This review is from: Carnival of the Animals with CD: Poems Inspired by Saint-Saëns' Music (Hardcover)
None of us get enough poetry in our lives. Our day-to-day interactions rarely cause us to stop and consider a work of Dickinson or even ponder a dollop of Frost. New Yorkers, however, have it easy. They get to see poetry every day. Thanks to the Poems on the Underground program that started in London and spread across the Atlantic, I get to read poems on the subway to and from work almost every day. So who should I thank for this chance to broaden my mind while crammed into someone's armpit? Thank Judith Chernaik, the founder of the same project. Now, however, Chernaik has expanded into the skittish world of children's literature. With Saint-Saens' light-hearted musical creation, "Carnival of the Animals" as her inspiration, she has culled poems from the brains of thirteen poets (including herself). In turn, Candlewick Press brought in well-established illustrator Satoshi Kitamura to whip up some pretty pictures for the equally pretty poems. The result is a wild concoction of image and sound. Poems leap off the page almost as beautifully as their visual counterparts. I have absolutely no idea who this book is supposed to be for in the end, but it's certainly nice enough to look at.

There are fourteen poems in all (no Table of Contents, sorry), with thirteen dedicated to the animals featured in Saint-Saens' music. Without so much as an Introduction, we immediately hit upon James Berry's faintly melancholy thoughts on the lion. From there we are whisked into a wild array of poems and animals. Gavin Ewart gives your average kangaroo a fairly metropolitan feel. Valerie Bloom tackles Saint-Saens', "The Aviary" and wins the book's Most Evocative Award. By the end we see the animals we've met now all on a stage with instruments in hand. The performance is done, and you are left remembering as wild an amalgamation of poetry, music, and visual art as you'll ever find again.

Kitamura's style of illustration has never done anything for me in the past. It's always struck me as cute but lacking. Now, as if to show me how wrong I've always been, Kitamura's pictures in this book burst from the pages with a kind of frenzied glee. He's gone haywire with "Carnival". Watercolors may be sepia toned one minute and then show an equallly dignified image of horses running across a green grass plain. The poem "Pianists" manages to be well-ordered around the text, and then explode into a sumptuous feast of colors and images comparable only to what happens when you close your eyes and press hard on your eyelids. His tortoises dance, his swan looks as if it should be accompanied by a haiku, and about the time you reach the dinosaur bones playing the clarinet you'll never want to leave the book again.

But who was this written for? Admittedly it's fairly easy to tell from the start that these were not children's poets Chernaik tapped. So perhaps we shouldn't be so surprised when Gerard Benson likens donkeys to theater critics or Gillian Clarke gives us elegant lines about the cuckoo like, "grows fat on murder, and in a stolen house / sings her two notes in an angel's voice". The poets are all excellent, of course. You won't find me maligning Edwin Morgan or Charles Causley. There's a lot of free verse, some variegated rhyme schemes, but that's about it. Don't expect anyone to get too creative. This is not the book to use if you want to show kids what a haiku or a senryu or even a sonnet is. The poetic forms found here are just what struck each poet as apropos at any given time. No more. No less. You want different kinds of poems? Go locate Paul Janeczko's, "A Kick In the Head", instead. Will kids be interested in animal poems that never get silly like Douglas Florian or include factual information like Joyce Sidman's, "Song of the Water Boatman"? If I were to harbor a guess, I'd have to say no. They won't instantly take to this book. And though I shudder to say it, I suspect that John Lithgow's version of "Carnival of the Animals" (which came out a mere 3 years before this book) is going to entertain kids far far more.

I searched in vain for the reason why Chernaik chose now to cull a picture book out of music that has already lent itself to picture books so often before. Why even limit it to children? It seems a little odd to be putting out yet another Carnival of the Animals picture book so soon after the Lithgow book that was tied into a 2003 New York City Ballet production. Certainly this book wins in the looks department. And the poems are very nice, yes yes. Maybe you could make a gift of this to a particularly musically gifted child. But Lithgow's book had one particular advantage over Chernaik's. In both cases, a CD accompanies the book. Which is to say, both books come with one. But while Lithgow's listed the track names on both the inside of the book AND on the CD itself, Chernaik's leaves all track information completely mysterious. Track names are necessary. They allow us to allow the music to follow along with the book. In Lithgow's case, he even went so far as to read each poem before the music it applied to. In contrast, the Chernaik book seems to have included the CD as an afterthought. The tracks match up with each poem, yes, but it would have been nice to hear someone read those poems after each selection of music. Or even, for that matter, know what each selection was even called? If you're trying to pull one section or poem out for consideration, it's mighty hard to do so without a title on the CD. It's also a little odd that the Chernaik CD begins without Saint-Saens' Introduction. An editing decision or the result of not planning a poem for that particular piece?

I can see this book used to teach poetry to teens (sneaking in a little classical music know-how to boot). Maybe some kids as well. But while Chernaik is the queen of the subway poetry selections, she has a ways to go before she conquers the world of children's literature quite as effectively. A nice book, but I honestly don't know who you'd want to give it to.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Book, November 14, 2008
This review is from: Carnival of the Animals with CD: Poems Inspired by Saint-Saëns' Music (Hardcover)
This is one of the few books I've borrowed from the library and then felt a need to purchase. My 7-yr old son, my 4-yr old daughter, and I all loved the poetry and illustrations as well as the readings and of course the music. What a wonderful find!
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars I thought this book was not so good, September 18, 2006
A Kid's Review
This review is from: Carnival of the Animals with CD: Poems Inspired by Saint-Saëns' Music (Hardcover)
I rate Carnival Animals two stars for fun illustrations and two pages of laughter. Thirty five percent of the poems that flow through the book are energizing. This book is like a taco: the good layer is the meat and cheese or illustrations; the bad layer is the lettuce and tomato or the rest of the poems.

Reviewed by Ben
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