by Carson Ellis (Author) Carson Ellis (Illustrator)
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Ellis's quiet, folk-naif exploration of the idea of "home" may invite comparison to Hoberman's A House Is a House for Me, but hers is a different journey. She starts in the real world--"Home is a house in the country. Or home is an apartment"--but drifts into memory and fantasy. A long-ago schoolbook might have been the source for the explorer's ship greeted by Native Americans: "Some homes are boats. Some homes are wigwams." Storybook scenes abound--a Mughal palace, a thieves' lair, a sunken Atlantian ruin. A tiny Russian kitchen crowded with dishes bears the legend, "A babushka lives here." On the facing page is a living room with craters and a familiar-looking planet out the window: "A Moonian lives here." The final pages show Ellis (Stagecoach Sal) in her studio, at work on the painting that opens the book. "An artist lives here," she writes, revealing a secret. "This is my home, and this is me." It's a work that confers classic gifts: time to look and time to wonder. "Where is your home?" she asks. "Where are you?" Ages 4-8. Agent: Steven Malk, Writers House. (Feb.)
Copyright 2014 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.K-Gr 2--The realistic, fanciful, and stereotypical merge in this picture book homage to the place we call home. Gouache-and-ink art featuring warm, earthy colors with splashes or spots of red illustrate the hand-lettered, simple text ("Home is a house in the country. Or home is an apartment." and later, "Sea homes. Bee homes. Hollow tree homes."). Familiar and unfamiliar (Kenya) and sometimes magical (Atlantis) settings inhabited by humans, animals, and mythical beings are included. The illustrations offer much to pore over and connections to be made. The dove that appears on the title page can be found throughout the book and the silhouette in an upstairs window of the house that appears on the first spread, reveals itself to be the hat of a girl on the final pages. The penultimate scene is that of an artist in her home surrounded by items familiar to readers (a weathervane, figure of a house, a ship in a bottle and a globe, and a piece of black-and-white fabric, and a pointed cap). These objects will give observant children pause and send them back to page one to see what other details and images are carried throughout the story. However, the Mideastern lair, the Japanese businessman's geometric home, a wigwam, and a pagoda, may give others pause for different reasons. VERDICT While skillfully rendered and artistically pleasing, this eclectic assortment of domiciles is hardly representational and is less than ideal for classroom usage.--Daryl Grabarek, School Library Journal
Copyright 2015 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.