Every Color of Light

by Hiroshi Osada (Author) Ryoji Arai (Illustrator)

Every Color of Light
Reading Level: 2nd − 3rd Grade

Every Color of Light opens on a lush, green forest in the rain. Illustrated by the masterful Ryoji Arai, the calm is shattered when the wind picks up and lightning cuts the sky. Yet out of this turbulence, the day blooms bright, the flowers open, and raindrops roll and drip down to the forest floor. The sun sets. The moon rises, and in a pool of water we see its reflection. We go to sleep with the forest, sinking into the pool, into the calm reflection of the moon.

Gentle and lyrical, Every Color of Light is a bedtime story told by the elements. Harmonizing our human experience to the natural world, Arai invites the reader to hold imaginative space for our oneness with the natural world.

Select format:
Hardcover
$17.95

Kirkus

Starred Review
 Colors fade with the children listening: “We’re all / falling / … / soundly / … / asleep…." Simply spectacular.

None

It's rare for a picture book to so vividly command attention without any characters, but the pictures are so stunning that a child who has dwelt in them will likely notice much more the next time they are observing nature, especially during a terrifying, thrilling thunderstorm.

Publishers Weekly

Starred Review

In a strong translation by Boyd, a Japanese team captures the magic of a summer rainstorm. Working in thick, dense strokes, Arai (What What What?) creates a lake surrounded by foliage whose colors range from spring green to spruce blue. Silver streaks show the first drops: "Look, it's raining." The rain falls harder ("Wetter/ And wetter"), and the greenery, the late poet Osada observes, changes: "The blues darken/ And so do the greens." Wind whips, leaves fly, rain slashes sideways; bolts of lightning flash across the spreads amid sodden blossoms; and thunder follows, "Cracking/ Crashing." After a few final flashes in the distance, the sky clears, and the storm is shown to have been ephemeral: "Look, no more rain." The sun sets, dusk falls, the stars emerge ("Shining, / They share their stories"). By employing landscapes in lieu of human or animal characters, Osada and Arai ask readers to look--really look--at the rain, the way the changing weather transforms the visible spectrum, and the magnificence of the night sky, phenomena all too often unseen in a hurry-up world. The result is a story that sharpens the senses and quiets the soul. Ages 4-up. (June)

Copyright 2020 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes



Hiroshi Osada
Ryôji Arai was born in Yamagata, Japan, in 1956. He has an illustrative style all of his own: bold, mischievous and unpredictable. Arai studied art at Nippon University. His art is at once genuine and truly poetic, encouraging children to paint and to tell their own stories. He took the Japanese picture-book world by storm in the 1990s. Since then, he has one multiple awards, including the international Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award in 2005.
David Boyd is Assistant Professor of Japanese at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. His translations have appeared in Monkey Business International, Granta, and Words Without Borders, among other publications.
Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9781592702916
Lexile Measure
-
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Enchanted Lion Books
Publication date
October 13, 2020
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV029010 - Juvenile Fiction | Nature & the Natural World | Environment
JUV029020 - Juvenile Fiction | Nature & the Natural World | Weather
JUV070000 - Juvenile Fiction | Poetry (see also Stories in Verse)
Library of Congress categories
Bedtime
Picture books
Nature
Color
Rain and rainfall

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