by Julie Morstad (Author)
A playful and poignant exploration of the nature of time through the eyes of a child from acclaimed author/illustrator Julie Morstad.
What is time? Is it the tick tick tock of a clock, numbers and words on a calendar? It's that, but so much more. Time is a seed waiting to grow, a flower blooming, a sunbeam moving across a room. Time is slow like a spider spinning her web or fast like a wave at the beach. Time is a wiggly tooth, or waiting for the school bell to ring, or reading a story . . . or three! But time is also morning for some and night for others, a fading sunset and a memory captured in a photo taken long ago. In this magical meditation on the nature of time,
Julie Morstad shines a joyful light on a difficult-to-grasp concept for young readers and reminds older readers to see the wonders of our world, including children themselves, through the lens of time.
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"Time is the tick tick tock/ of the/ clock/ and/ numbers and words on a calendar.// But what else is time?" This ethereal book of ideas by Morstad (Girl on a Motorcycle) captures variations on how time passes in lyrical writing and images that offer moments of wonder and change. Multimedia spreads capture the way that time can be seen in the movement of sun across the floor, the rising of bread dough, the growth of flora: "Time is a tree./ While it grows, so do you./ Who will be taller in two years?/ In ten years?" In one spread, Morstad draws an inclusive array of maturing faces, starting with children and imagining them aging into young people or middle-aged people with lined skin: "Time is a face whose lines and shapes change little by little, year by year." Other spreads show how the temporal can move quickly or slowly, be caught in an image and suspended, and even visualized ("Is time a line? Or maybe a circle?"), before the book's end cleverly brings readers right into a specific moment in a child's day: dinnertime. A conceptual meditation, winsome and enigmatic. Ages 3-7. Agent: Emily van Beek, Folio Jr./Folio Literary Management. (Sept.)
Copyright 2021 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission."Thoughtful metaphors and diverse characters take viewers through the manifold dimensions of time. . . . This exuberant vehicle will expand the thinking of those just beginning to comprehend clocks and calendars." —STARRED REVIEW, Kirkus Reviews
"A conceptual meditation, winsome and enigmatic". —STARRED REVIEW, Publishers Weekly
"A fascinating way to think about the passage of time." —STARRED REVIEW, Booklist