by Herve Tullet (Author) Herve Tullet (Illustrator)
WorldCat is the world's largest library catalog, helping you find library materials online.
Clever new metafiction from the prolific French artist (Press Here, 2011, etc.). With a seeming nod to Pirandello's absurdist early-20th-century play Six Characters in Search of an Author, Tullet introduces a literally sketchy cast, utterly discombobulated at having been prematurely discovered. "There are people here... / And they've opened OUR BOOK!" The characters (pink pig, wand-toting fairy, orange dog, green snake, amorphous stick figure and red monster) confer over how best to entertain the "very sweet" readers who've suddenly materialized. First they produce "a bit of background color" (a consciously banal tropical sunset). Concurring that they need a story and, ergo, an author, they remember that they know one! The pack descends upon Tullet. (Wryly, he plays himself, in photographed headshots atop a crayoned blue shirt.) Contrasting with the preceding slapdash, mixed-media tumult, the author's orderly studio (replete with tools of his trade) is rendered in perspective, in thick black line. Pressured by his unruly creations, he supplies a sappy eight-page vignette to get them to clear out. Their negative critique provokes him to order them off (while conspiratorially enlisting readers to "Press HERE, please?" to turn off the desk lamp). The thick, black, paper-over-board cover suggests a sketchbook; in the adeptly controlled chaos within, Tullet outlines the elements of a good story while supplying kids with plenty of inspiration to create their own. (Picture book. 4-8)
Copyright 2014 Kirkus Reviews, LLC Used with permission.
"Guys, come here!...There are people here...and they've opened OUR BOOK!" Caught off guard, the childishly marker-drawn central characters attempt to put on a good show (book), eventually enlisting an author's help. Collaged photos of Tullet as the author should appeal to his fans. The joke goes on too long for preschoolers, but this could be a hit with elementary-age would-be book creators.
Copyright 2014 Hornbook Guide, LLC Used with permission.
With plenty of self-referential good cheer, Tullet (Press Here) makes fun of picture books--and of himself, too. The fourth wall comes down immediately as a hastily scrawled cast of characters--fairy princess, pig, dog, snake, stick figure--look out of the page in faux shock ("Someone's watching us!"). "I think they would like a story," says the pig. They scramble to provide entertainment, holding up a cheesy ocean sunset backdrop, then recruiting a bad guy. "I don't know anything about stories," says the red monster, who's more sweet than scary. "You're going to need someone else... an author!" A door opens to reveal Tullet in his studio, a photo of his aggrieved face pasted onto a scribbled cartoon body. "Sorry," he says, in comic consternation, "but you can't stay here.... This book isn't finished yet!" After creating a hasty story for his characters, the author chases everybody out. Particularly effective is Tullet's use of varying visual vocabularies to signal the frame stories and the narratives inside them, while exuberant splashes and splotches read as the happy embrace of imperfection. Ages 4-8. (May)
Copyright 2014 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.Gr 1-3--Tullet breaks the fourth wall in this fantastic book. His characters look readers right in the eye and talk directly to them. A pig and a princess are busy playing when they notice they are being watched; they stop and call for other characters to come and take a look. They're all unpolished scribbles created with various media and mixed in with smudges, smears, doodles, and notes the author has written to himself. The chaos is great fun and gives the appearance of a book in progress. Tullet himself has a cameo, mugging for the camera in a series of entertaining head shots on top of a drawn torso. His cast of characters begs him for a story so readers won't get bored and go away, and he obliges them. But they're less than impressed with his effort. He feigns offense, and in a wonderful reference to his wildly successful Press Here (Chronicle, 2011), he asks readers to push the button on his desk lamp, leaving the characters in the dark, their bewildered eyes glowing. They ask readers to turn the light back on and express their gratitude with sweet farewells. The pig and princess resume their play. Kids will love the messiness of the pages and the casual, witty dialogue. With this book, Tullet adds to his repertoire of interactive creations unparalleled in their cleverness and merriment.--Alyson Low, Fayetteville Public Library, AR
Copyright 2014 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.