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Lizzie Nonsense (Bccb Blue Ribbon Picture Book Awards (Awards)) [Hardcover]

Jan Ormerod (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

August 15, 2005 5 and upK and upBccb Blue Ribbon Picture Book Awards (Awards)
Pioneers in the Australian bush, like those on America’s western frontier, had isolated, difficult lives. In this story, based on the author’s own family history, Papa goes away to work, leaving Lizzie and Mama and baby alone in their little house. Lizzie’s playful pretending turns routine chores into games and adventures. Mama calls it “Lizzie nonsense,” but Mama herself has an imaginative, lighthearted side.

Stunning landscapes and graceful, affectionately drawn characters make Jan Ormerod’s remarkable paintings an evocative counterpart to this touching portrayal of family ties in pioneer days.


Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Kindergarten-Grade 2–Lizzie lives with her mother, father, and baby brother in a small, isolated house in the Australian bush. Her father has taken his sandalwood into town to sell and will be gone for weeks. Lizzie passes the lonely days by indulging in flights of fancy, turning a fallen tree trunk into a mighty steed, baby's bath into the wide blue sea, and her clutch of wildflowers into a bridal bouquet. Her mother dismisses her dreaming as nonsense, but her own need to imagine surfaces on Sundays, when they dress in their best and walk back and forth on the track, pretending they have been to church. Ormerod has based this story on the experiences of her grandmother and mother, and the warmth of the reminiscences has an authentic ring. The text is simple yet evocative, emphasizing the parent-child relationship, while the skillfully rendered watercolors bring the unique setting to life as kangaroos and dingoes wander through the landscape. The book works nicely as a satisfying story of the value of imagination, familial affection, and an introduction to pioneer life.–Grace Oliff, Ann Blanche Smith School, Hillsdale, NJ
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

PreS-Gr. 2. Like Eve Bunting's Dandelions (1995) and Deborah Hopkinson's Packet of Seeds (2004), this strikingly illustrated picture book captures the loneliness, hard work, and stark beauty of pioneer life, but here the setting is the Australian bush. After Papa leaves on a long trip, young Lizzie, Mama, and the baby are alone in the little house. Lizzie's vivid imagination brightens the tedium of daily tasks: instead of turnips for dinner, Lizzie envisions "peaches and cream," and instead of tattered mending, she imagines a dress "with lots of frills and lace and bows." Her practical mother calls her daughter's dreaming "Lizzie Nonsense," but Mama imagines, too, when she dresses in Sunday best and pretends that the family is strolling to church. This Australian import is more situation than story, but its simple language has a smooth cadence that's just right for reading aloud, and Ormerod's ethereal watercolor illustrations, layered with sun-spotted textures, powerfully evoke the history, the heat, the dust, and the brave, strong family. A poignant title that extends the pioneer story beyond the American plains. Gillian Engberg
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 5 and up
  • Hardcover: 40 pages
  • Publisher: Clarion Books (August 15, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 061857493X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0618574933
  • Product Dimensions: 10.1 x 10 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,728,494 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars No Nonsense Here: Excellent, Award-Winning Book, January 15, 2007
This review is from: Lizzie Nonsense (Bccb Blue Ribbon Picture Book Awards (Awards)) (Hardcover)
Lizzie, her mom, and her baby sister have it tough in turn-of-the-century outback Australia, and its even tougher when Papa travels 40 miles away to sell their crop, following the old "sand rails" (not sure what those might be). Their struggles are physical as well as emotional-- daily chores with minimal nourishment, and dangerous native animals (e.g., snakes and dingoes) among them. To wage this private war, Lizzie uses her imagination to conjure up better times and places: When helping bathe the baby in a tub of water, she sings, "You're afloat in a boat on a big, wide sea." Her mom responds in a seemingly harsh way: "You and your nonsense!" BY the third times Mama responds this way("you are full of nonsense"), we can see a little smile on her face; it's clear this is a playful ritual without any underlying anger or frustration (at least, not at Lizzie, herself). Still, when reading this to youngsters, you might want to say the mother's reproaches with the light touch that the author intended.

Lizzie's imagination is fun, but it contrasts deeply with life in the bushlands: "Tonight,"says Lizzie, "we will eat peaches, and cream, and little sweet cakes." "Such nonsense!" says her mama." We are having turnips, as usual. When Lizzie and Mama mend their clothes, Lizzie (matter-of-factly and with no apparent self-pity) says that she making a dress "with lots of frills and laces and bows." "What an imagination," says her mama. In an especially poignant scene, author/illustrator Ormerod shows that even the admonishing mom needs some fantasy: Every Sunday they "put on their best clothes" and walk along the track and back, pretending that they're going to church.

While this story of struggle on a non-American frontier doesn't sentimentalize, there are some bright spots that could be excellent discussion points. Lizzie and her mom have a close relationship, out of necessity, yes, but also out of their shared experience. There's also the implicit beauty of the land. Ormerud's beautiful and evocative watercolors show the play of light upon rich foliage, playful kangaroos and the dusk-lit forms of marsupials and dingoes, the warmth of the fire and the oil-lit lamp. At the conclusion, they hear the jingling of Papa's horses, and out of an orange-colored dawn they see him approaching. They run excitedly to meet him, and Ormerud has another, even more warm round of affection and disclaimer:

"You're as pretty as a picture, Beatrice," says the father.

"Nonsense, Albert!"

"And you," he says to Lizzie, "are as brave and pretty as your mother."

"Nonsense!" says Lizzie.

Warm, funny, yet realistic and historical, this 33-page book would make a wonderful addition to the school or home library.
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4.0 out of 5 stars "Nonsense! It's your head that is in the clouds!", November 2, 2005
This review is from: Lizzie Nonsense (Bccb Blue Ribbon Picture Book Awards (Awards)) (Hardcover)
Brilliant illustrations bring Lizzie's days in the bush alive, colors and drawings showing rather than telling of an isolated existence in the bush country, where Lizzie's father must take his horse-drawn cart of sandalwood over fifty miles to market. Lizzie, her mother and baby sibling are left behind to manage until his return. It is a lonely life, but Lizzie's overactive imagination turns every task into an adventure.

Whenever Lizzie announces a new make-believe idea, her mother comments, "Nonsense, Lizzie!" But Lizzie will not be deterred. She rides the limb of a tree, reins attached to a branch, a paper crown on her head; when baby is having a bath, Lizzie sings, "You're afloat on a boat on a big, wide sea"; while her mother tends the garden, Lizzie fancies herself a bride, a garland of flowers in her hair; and when her mother prepares the usual fare of turnips for dinner, Lizzie announces, "Tonight we will eat peaches and cream and little sweet cakes".

Although Mother pretends that Lizzie is full of nonsense, the little girl brightens their world, awaiting her father's return, lifting their daily drudgery into light-hearted banter. Even on Sunday, Lizzie's mama indulges a bit in fancy herself, as they dress up in their best clothes, walking along the road, pretending they have been to church. Mother and daughter think their minds are playing tricks when they hear the jangling of a harness, but, indeed, it is Father returning to his family.

The combination of pictures and prose tell a charming story of life years ago in the bush, where dingoes howl at night and nature's presence is part of the landscape. The mind of a child creates a fairy-tale ambiance, bringing joy to her family and to young readers who learn of the early struggles of families in a sparsely populated country, turning hardship into fables, the magic world of imagination. Luan Gaines/ 2005.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
When Lizzie's mama and papa were married, the sun shone on fields of yellow wheat that grew right up to the door of the tiny church. Read the first page
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