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Ebook Télécharger [Journey] (By: Aaron Becker) [published: August, 2014], by Aaron Becker

Ebook Télécharger [Journey] (By: Aaron Becker) [published: August, 2014], by Aaron Becker

Eh bien, ce qui vous concernent qui a lu jamais ce genre de publication? Ceci est votre temps de commencer à connaître et à lire ce type de genre de publication. Jamais question de la que nous fournissons [Journey] (By: Aaron Becker) [published: August, 2014], By Aaron Becker. Il vous apportera à la vie vraiment nouvelle marque. En outre, il ne signifie pas la vraie vie, nous sommes sûrs que votre vie sera beaucoup mieux. Vous trouverez certainement aussi les choses flambant neuf que vous ne sont jamais des diverses autres ressources.

[Journey] (By: Aaron Becker) [published: August, 2014], by Aaron Becker

[Journey] (By: Aaron Becker) [published: August, 2014], by Aaron Becker


[Journey] (By: Aaron Becker) [published: August, 2014], by Aaron Becker


Ebook Télécharger [Journey] (By: Aaron Becker) [published: August, 2014], by Aaron Becker

Est -ce [Journey] (By: Aaron Becker) [published: August, 2014], By Aaron Becker réserver votre lecture préférée? Est - fictions? Juste comment est sur son bilan? Ou est le fournisseur le plus efficace roman votre sélection pour remplir votre temps supplémentaire? Ou peut - être la politique ou des livres spirituels recherchez - vous maintenant? Ici , nous allons nous fournissons des collections de livres [Journey] (By: Aaron Becker) [published: August, 2014], By Aaron Becker que vous avez besoin. Offres spéciales de nombre de livres de nombreux champs sont fournis. De fictions à la recherche scientifique et religieux peut être consulté, ainsi que appris ici. Vous ne pourriez pas vous inquiétez pas de découvrir votre livre appelé à examiner. Ce [Journey] (By: Aaron Becker) [published: August, 2014], By Aaron Becker est l' un d'entre eux.

C'est un problème typique. Pour surmonter ce qui a, tout ce que doit faire? L'examen d'un livre? Sûrement? Pourquoi pas? La publication est parmi les sources que de nombreuses personnes comptent sur de celui-ci. En outre, il va certainement dépendre de type de guide ainsi que le titre ou l'auteur; publications ont constamment des pensées positives et que les esprits. [Journey] (By: Aaron Becker) [published: August, 2014], By Aaron Becker est parmi les alternatives pour vous vous faire des recherche en avant pour votre vie. Comme l'a reconnu, vérifier certainement vous mener une bien meilleure façon. La manière dont vous prenez sera évidemment à votre situation analogue.

La lecture d'une publication peut vous aider à ouvrir le monde flambant neuf. De ne rien savoir à tout savoir peut être atteint lors de la vérification des livres grand nombre de fois. Comme beaucoup de gens disent, beaucoup plus de publications que vous consultez, beaucoup plus de points que vous aimeriez savoir, cependant quelques points que vous vous sentirez certainement vraiment. Oui, la lecture du livre va certainement conduire votre esprit d'ouvrir l'esprit et toujours aussi essayer de chercher l'autre savoir-faire, aussi de nombreuses sources. [Journey] (By: Aaron Becker) [published: August, 2014], By Aaron Becker comme un moyen exactement comment il est recommandé Guide sera certainement offert pour vous de l'obtenir.

Oui tu as raison; ce livre qui est fourni dans ce site Internet reste dans les données douces. Pourtant, il ne suggère pas qu'il va certainement baisser le contenu web du livre. Elle comprend précisément les avantages. Vous pouvez copier le soft pour appliquer votre propre gadget ainsi que l'examen chaque fois que vous voulez. [Journey] (By: Aaron Becker) [published: August, 2014], By Aaron Becker est toujours d'être juste un des livres invités à lire, par de nombreuses personnes dans le monde entier.

[Journey] (By: Aaron Becker) [published: August, 2014], by Aaron Becker

Détails sur le produit

Broché

Editeur : Walker Books Ltd (7 août 2014)

Langue : Anglais

ASIN: B00VYOR5OA

Moyenne des commentaires client :

5.0 étoiles sur 5

4 commentaires client

Classement des meilleures ventes d'Amazon:

2.119.675 en Livres (Voir les 100 premiers en Livres)

C'est le livre préféré de notre enfant, demandé fréquemment. Comme il n'y a pas de mots dans le livre, juste des images, chaque nuit, nous lisons qu'il y a une nouvelle aventure. Les images sont magnifiques. Hautement recommandé.

Magnifique album sans texte ou presque et pourtant un voyage a partager encore et encore avc les petits ! Mon neveu a bcp aimé !

Sometimes words aren't necessary.Just follow your dream and the doors will opened.This book is a small treasure to share with the people you love.:-)

magnifiques illustrations qui laissent place au rêve et soutiennent l'imagination.

I am a reading specialist using my skills as a volunteer reading tutor for the past 17 years in a local public school. My students range from 5-9. When I discovered "Journey" and the series, I was ecstatic - a novel with no words! I used this book with my second and third grade students. This books allows you to teach all the aspects of a novel: characters, location, plot, solution, and theme. Each student created the elements of the story then dictated the text to me as I typed on my computer. When revised, the student read the book to the class as I turned the pages!! The students were so proud of their work; I helped with vocabulary development ,descriptive words, reading interest; they owned their work with their ideas. My students range from low self-esteem, gifted, ELL - this approach can be used with all!!!The pictures are full of detail which invites imagination and awe! Thank you, Aaron Becker.

I’ve encountered something new and exciting at this late stage of the game. For years I’ve been reviewing picture books written for children. Working with them on almost a day-to-day basis as a children's librarian, I did not doubt that my experience helped me to separate out the wheat from the chaff (so to speak). Then I had my own kiddo and together we were able to plumb the depths of the board book genre. Now the small child has grown quite fond of picture books, so together we’ve explored books that would be within her age range and those that are, perhaps, a tiny bit of a stretch. I will tell you right now that “Journey” by Aaron Becker is not intended for the toddler crowd. Not necessarily. With its fine attention to detail and jaw-dropping storyline, Becker has created a modern day classic in the midst of an overpopulated genre. That said, do not hesitate to introduce this book to any and all kiddos you have at hand. Give it to your teenagers. Give it to your ankle biters. The more people that sit down and take in the pages of the book, the better off the whole of humanity will be. For my part, I’m just delighted that repeated one-on-one readings of books like this one yield all sorts of additional information and details that will help my reviewing. There’s a lot to be said for this whole parenting thing, eh?A girl is bored. Bored bored bored bored bored. With her mom cooking and yakking on the phone, her dad glued to his computer and her older sister consumed by some kind of electronic handheld device, there’s no one to play with. But when the girl’s cat reveals itself to have been sitting on a bright red writing implement (is it a marker, a crayon, or chalk?), she knows immediately what to do. A door is drawn on the wall of her room and passing through it instantly yields a glorious lantern lit world, replete with tall green trees and a meandering stream. When the girl draws a boat with which to explore the stream she is drawn into a massive water-driven city full of friendly residents, canals, and locks. An accidental slip over the side causes her to draw a hot air balloon and all is well until she spots a beautiful purple bird. Pursued by a relentless villain, the creature is caught and caged. Our heroine attempts a daring rescue but is caught herself in the attempt. Fortunately, things turn out well in the end and she finds that maybe in her humdrum drab little world at home there’s someone else there willing to share an adventure or two.Seems this book can’t get a review without someone comparing it to “Harold and the Purple Crayon”. That’s fair, I suppose. After all, it’s about a kid creating solutions to the world around them with the help of a brightly colored . . . I guess I’ll call it a crayon, though at no point does it ever establish itself as one thing or another. And there’s even a falling-and-drawing-a-hot-air-balloon sequence that is straight up Harold, no question. That said, all other similarities to Harold stop right there. You see, I’ve always personally been a bit creeped out by Harold. Sure, I recognize the brilliance in the simple writing and the art is a dream to the eye in its minimalism. Yet there was always something cold and lonely to the Harold books. Nothing he draws ever moves. He’s creating his own reality, but everything he encounters originally sprouted from his own crayon. “Journey” is vastly different. Here our heroine meets new people, some of whom are friendly and some are not. She interacts with them. Instead of being limited to the world of her crayon, her crayon instead introduces her to whole new worlds she would never have seen otherwise. So while Harold exists in the cold white plain pages of a book, destined to provide only one color for variety, this girl uses her one color to explore other colors and other worlds and other people and cultures. There’s a metaphor just ah-brewing here, you know it, but I’ll leave it to you to extend it to its natural end.Not afraid of architecture is Mr. Becker. Nope. Not a jot afraid. When you turn the pages of the book and see the castle-like city for the first time with its golden domes and green parasol-carrying residents, it’s a jaw-dropper. Honestly awe-inspiring. I may have to credit it with my daughter’s current obsession now with castles. The first person it made me think of, actually, was David Macaulay. Macaulay’s books featuring expansive architecture are the closest kin to what Becker is doing here. But unlike Macaulay, Becker does not seem to sport any actual degrees in architecture. He’s a trained artist, and clearly a well-trained one, but if he excels in this area it is due to his talent rather than his experience. I then showed this book to my husband and he looked at it with interest. “It has a lot of similarities to ‘Avatar: The Last Airbender’,” he pointed out. Boy howdy, I’m glad he pointed that out. It most certainly does! I don’t know how many of you have taken the time to studiously watch the Nickelodeon hit animated television show, but in truth there’s a lot of “Avatar” to be found here. From the city with the waterways and locks to the boats in the sky to even the sensation of flying over unfamiliar cities and lands, at the very least this makes a darned good companion to “Avatar”, if not an outright introduction to it.I don’t know how many authors and illustrators know this, but in my experience there are a lot of teachers out there who send their students into libraries to ask for wordless picture books. Often these are used for writing exercises where the kids write the plot of the books, but once in a while you’d get a creative soul who understands that visual storytelling is the great unifier. Take a kid from another country that has recently immigrated, hand them a wordless book, and watch as they find (much to their own relief) that they are able to “read” the text. This goes for reluctant readers and kids that are reading below their grade levels. It’s also great for very young readers who cannot yet read words but delight in telling stories. Becker easily could have added text to this book. It wouldn’t have been pretty, but it could have happened. Instead, he and his editor and even his publisher took a chance and let the images and the storytelling do the talking. Sometimes you have to shut your trap to truly hear what a book has to say.I’ll confess a small quibble I had at one point involving the villain. There’s not a ton of diversity in this book, and I do prefer titles that aren’t afraid to show folks from a variety of different races. That’s why I was a bit unnerved at first by the baddie. Dressed in full regalia worthy of a villain, with his Fu Manchu moustache and samurai dress, there’s something distinctly Asian about him. This struck me as a bit unfortunate, but upon closer examination I realized that I couldn’t tell the race of the girl either. And for that matter, it’s not like Becker is pinpointing a single nation or ethnicity as his big bad. There appear to be Egyptian decals on some of his architecture. His house for the bird has a somewhat pagoda look to it. Maybe I’m justifying everything, but it seems to me that Becker was trying more than anything else to have a bad guy who was easy to spot (note the golden helmet) and that looked different from the residents of the water-based city. Becker himself spent time in Japan, I believe, so it’s not out of the question that his art style might be affected, but I hardly think he’s guilty of playing on stereotypes.There is a very different argument against this book that I should address, however. I was at a nice little shindig the other day, talking with librarians about picture books we think should win big awards and the subject of “Journey” came up. “Oh,” said a woman to me, “I love it, but one of my librarians had a real problem with the gun.” I blinked a little and then searched my memory banks. The gun? I had no idea the book had a gun. Well, you can bet I ran back home and looked the book over cover to cover. After some work I finally located the alleged “gun”. It’s tricky, but I think this is what the woman meant. There is a scene in the book where the bad guy is seen from a distance, directing his two men to hand the captured purple bird in a cage. He is pointing at them, but the way Becker drew the image the hand takes on the shape of, yes, a teeny tiny gun. This is clearly a quirk of the art. Look on a previous page and you can see the villain doing the same hand movement in his little airship, just with his fingers (some folks think his hand is a gun as well, but if you look you'll see that the colors of said "gun" are the same as his arm, suggesting that this is just a very insistent pointer finger). That same pointing movement is replicated on the next page, but because of an extra bump of his hand, the hand itself looks somewhat gun like. Of course, it would make NO sense for it to even be a gun. The baddie is just directing his men. He’s not holding them up at gunpoint. More to the point, if this guy was to carry a gun, a typical handgun wouldn't make a lick of sense. He's sport a blunderbuss or something that fits in with the environment around him. Plus, why would he be waving a gun at a bird he just wants to capture and cage? This is just a quirk of an image. A person reads into it what they themselves want to see. If you want to see a gun, you'll see a gun, but trust me when I say it's only going to be wishful thinking on your part.Usually when we talk about stunning wordless picture books we talk about artist David Wiesner. With his three gold Caldecott medals and who knows how many awards to his name, it’s nice when someone else can also give us a glimpse into whole new worlds. Becker’s debut isn’t afraid to go epic on his first turn around the block. Packed with details, the book rewards readings and rereadings. It’s a true original, though it certainly harkens back to classic picture books of yore. I don’t get to use this word very often when I’m talking about books for young children but I’m going to dust it off and use it now: Beautiful. There’s no other way to describe “Journey”. Take your own today.For ages 2 and up.

This is, in my opinion, an essential book for parents and non-parents alike. It is a work of literature, stunning in its artistry, poetic in its imagery, minimalism, and allusions.What you have here is a wordless storybook. It is, I would suggest, more a work of art, a collection of linked paintings that tell a story. Our main character (nameless), seeks refuge from her disconnected life in the adventures she creates with her red crayon. Sound like a book we've all read and loved? Stay with me. She journeys, with her crayon, into a beautifully imagined world and an adventure. I really don't want to ruin the BRILLIANT (boy how I wish FB would let me italicize) twist ending, but I will say that this is so much more than an homage to HAROLD AND THE PURPLE CRAYON, it is an extension of it, a tribute to it, a joining of worlds.I read this book with my three-and-a-half-year-old son last night and he was enthralled. In spite of the fact that there were no words, he was gripped. Why? The lack of a defined way of telling this story allowed us to tell it ourselves. Tonight, when we read it again, it will be slightly different. New words will be used to give voice to the story told through the images. Every time we read this book, it will become new. That is special.I can't speak highly enough of this book. Even as an adult I read it and appreciate what it does. Absolutely stunning. Brilliant in every way. Please, do yourself a favor, spend the fourteen or fifteen bucks and get this. Cherish it. Because your child (or you) will read it at 3, at 5, at 10, at 16, at 30, at 80. This is a book I would, as a teacher, work into units from kindergarten through graduate school. How many books can you say that about? Incredible.

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