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Scribble [Library Binding]

Deborah Freedman (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

Price: $18.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Hardcover $12.47  
Library Binding, May 8, 2007 $18.99  
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Book Description

3 and upP and up
Emma likes to draw princesses. Her little sister Lucie prefers kitties. Emma and Lucie might not always get along, but can their drawings? Deborah Freedman proves once and for all whether kitties and princesses can live happily ever after in her charmingly original picture book debut.


From the Hardcover edition.

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Kindergarten-Grade 2—When Emma insults her younger sister's cat drawing by calling it a scribble, Lucie retaliates by drawing all over the older girl's picture of a sleeping princess. So begins the tale as Lucie follows Scribble Cat into Emma's drawing in search of the beautiful princess who is now obscured behind a tangled bramble of scribbles. After much difficulty, the lines are rolled into a ball and Scribble Cat awakens the sleeping princess with a kiss. Despite Emma's protestations that a kitty and a princess can't get married, they do anyway and live happily ever after. This fresh and imaginative story-within-a-story perfectly captures the logic and tone of children's dialogue, especially two arguing siblings. But the text is only half of the story. Freedman combines two wildly different drawing styles to great effect as she takes readers between reality and her characters' artwork. Her "real world" illustrations are reminiscent of Maurice Sendak's work complete with speech bubbles. The artist's attention to detail is excellent, making it easy to see that Lucie is sorry about ruining Emma's picture without a word being uttered. The amusing antics of Scribble Cat, who looks as though he's been drawn by a preschooler, come alive for readers. Having Lucie's real-world kitty join her in drawings adds another layer of entertainment. A fun and imaginative romp.—Catherine Callegari, Gay-Kimball Library, Troy, NH
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Review

"... Freedman's willingness to color outside the lines pays off - she's created a clever gem of a book." -- Publishers Weekly

"... liable to spark young imaginations." -- Kirkus

"... will enchant the very youngest of readers, while also enthralling older readers who are savvy enough to appreciate and ponder its many dimensions." -- Bookpage

"A fun and imaginative romp." -- School Library Journal --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 3 and up
  • Library Binding: 40 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf Books for Young Readers (May 8, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0375939660
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375939662
  • Product Dimensions: 10 x 8.1 x 0.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #8,498,545 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Deborah Freedman was trained to be an architect, but what she loves to do most is build worlds in books. Her first picture book, SCRIBBLE (Knopf), was a Children's Book Sense Pick and a finalist for the 2008 Connecticut Book Award. Her next book, BLUE CHICKEN, was published by Viking in September 2011 to three starred reviews. Please visit www.deborahfreedman.net to learn more about Deborah and her work.

SCRIBBLE:
"... a clever gem of a book" - Publishers Weekly

BLUE CHICKEN:
"... simply exquisite" - Kirkus Reviews, ★starred review



 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Like nothing you've ever seen before, August 20, 2007
This review is from: Scribble (Hardcover)
I like "Scribble". No, I don't think you understand. I reeeeeeally like "Scribble". I like its art and its style and its "message" (or whatever the equivalent term might be) and pretty much everything about it. The only problem with "Scribble" is that it's not a flashy book. It's sweet and subtle and as a result it's probably not going to draw too much attention to itself. With that in mind, I charge each and every one of you to seek it out since no one's gonna go out and do it for you. The picture book that shatters the reality between what you create and what you are is difficult to pull off. All the more so when it's as fun, readable, and kid-friendly as "Scribble".

Oh, Emma. Thinking she knows everything. Emma's one of those girls who goes around drawing princesses all the time. Lucie, on the other hand, prefers to draw kitties. When Emma, in her oh-so-superior way, informs Lucie that her cat looks more like a scribble than a feline, the younger sister retaliates by scribbling all over Emma's newest princess picture. However, Scribble (the cat Lucie has drawn) grows curious about the sleeping princess, now trapped behind what appears to be a Giant Thicket. With a reluctant Lucie tagging behind, he attempts to free the beauty and save the day. Yet it's only when the little girl agrees to help and undo the damage she's done to the princess's picture that everyone is allowed to live happily ever after.

Visually, the book really does pop. It starts with a kind of cartoony style. Individual panels and speech bubble break up the action with characters occasionally leaping off the page towards the reader. Eventually, as Emma leaves and Lucie's imagination has a chance to expand, the piece of paper containing Scribble grows to immense proportions, completely obliterating the entire paneled scheme. Emma's real cat, a small white one who takes to Scribble as recognizable kin, is always easy to spot against the yellow and pink background. Ditto Emma's white shirt beneath her overalls. The color scheme of the book bounces back and forth between pink and yellow. Emma wears all pink and Lucie all yellow. Yet when Lucie crosses over from her yellow paper to Emma's pink world, suddenly her overalls take on an unfamiliar rosy hue. On a related note, it's interesting to watch the dynamic between the two sisters. They're always shown across the table from one another, one on her pink side and one on her yellow. It's fun to see how Lucie's literal leap into her sister's world helps change her own perspective.

Reading and rereading the book brings something new to the eye every time. Did you catch the moment near the end where Emma's "sleeping" princess opens here eyes while Emma informs Lucie that kitties and princesses do not wed? Or that once Lucie has fully entered into Emma's picture, the princess appears to be trapped within a castle made up of different shades of pink on pink? Even Scribble's kiss on the princess's cheek is a tiny yellow heart, and the result causes his own cheeks to take on a rose colored hue of their own. Everything has its place in this book, and the repeating colors really tie it all together.

And just apart from all of that, I really appreciate any book where a little girl character can wear yellow cat-bedecked overalls and short hair. Some books would have you believe that all little girls sport dresses and have long lovely locks 24/7. And how awesome is Scribble anyway? It is desperately hard for adults to draw like children. An adult who tries will usually mess up by getting proportions correct or will have lines too suspiciously smooth. Not Freedman. Scribble, as you can see from the cover, is absolutely perfect. Even when he starts moving about, his lines are absolutely remarkable. The oversized head coupled with the small body and wobbly legs. The princess isn't too shabby either, but it's really Scribble who steals the show time and time again. Best of all, I bet it wouldn't be too difficult for child readers to draw "Scribbles" of their own if they were so inspired to do so.

It seems unfair to forget Freedman's words in the midst of her clever art. Consider her use of dialogue and narrative. When Scribble and Lucie go on their quest, the book's narration suddenly changes. Where before it was all speech bubbles and panels, now there's a narrator giving voice to the mute Scribble's thoughts and desires. Basically, the book becomes a real fairy tale for a little while, using terms like, "drowsy eyes and rosy cheeks." Even when Lucie follows her kitty to the other side, the book says that she goes through, "through acres of one color into another." Acres. That's lovely.

I found myself thinking about a couple things from Scott McCloud's Understanding Comics when I read this book. McCloud states that people who read comics identify more readily with cartoonish characters than the ones who look more realistic. In this book, Lucie and her sister are relatively realistic with the princess and Scribble appearing as simplified cartoons. So it wouldn't be too surprising if a kid reading this book ended up identifying with Scribble more than the girls, if we are to take McCloud's theory to heart. McCloud also discusses the importance of "line" in a comic. At the end of "Scribble", Lucie has successfully gathered up the line of the scribble she placed on her sister's picture. The last we see of it, her cat is playing with it as it dribbles off-screen. In many ways, this is a book about the very basics of cartooning, but in a way that's fun for very young children.

The obvious equivalent to this book right off the top of my head would have to be something like The Three Pigs by David Wiesner. Other similarities include books like Bad Day at Riverbend by Chris Van Allsburg. I wouldn't say that it was common for a character in a book to be aware of their status on a page, but at the very least it's not viewed as too complex for children to understand. The real lure of "Scribble" is that even as the realistic main character starts interacting with her drawn cat scribble, we totally believe in her journey. It's easy to interpret this story as the way in which Lucie deals with her guilt over scribbling over her sister's picture and concocts this complex narrative of rescue and marriage as a kind of therapeutic release. Either that or it just a fun book for fun kids. No reason why it can't be both, to my mind. It's a remarkable package hiding within the most deceptively simple premise I've run across this year. It's a book that's smart enough for adults and kid-centric enough for its intended audience. A sleeper hit that I seriously hope you will not miss.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Adorable Little Book, May 12, 2007
This review is from: Scribble (Hardcover)
This is a sweet little book unlike any I've really seen before. The illustrations are an adorable mix of two cute little sisters coupled with very childish drawings that my 2-year old daughter finds very amusing. The story is simple but something about the way it's all put together is just very charming. We have literally hundreds of books in our house and this is my daughter's current favorite. Fun to read for adults as well.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A love story, December 27, 2011
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This review is from: Scribble (Hardcover)
Sibling rivalry takes a twist when two sister's drawings come to life and fall in love! My daughter, a cat lover with five of her own, is charmed by this unlikely romance.
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