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Overview
Journey from the everyday to the exotic with this alphabet on the move. Cross the B-shaped arches of a bridge; land on the angled L of an airfield; drive over the looped O of an overpass.
Bill Mayer's bold art evokes classic travel posters with utterly modern color and flair. Allow your imagination to soar — and discover something unexpected in each elegant picture puzzle.
Synopsis
Journey from the everyday to the exotic with this alphabet on the move. Cross the B-shaped arches of a bridge; land on the angled L of an airfield; drive over the looped O of an overpass.
Bill Mayer's bold art evokes classic travel posters with utterly modern color and flair. Allow your imagination to soar and discover something unexpected in each elegant picture puzzle.
Publishers Weekly
Mayer (A Walk in the Rain with a Brain) creates a '20s-style travel poster for each letter in this elegant abecedary. Working in grainy airbrush gouache to mimic the steely blue, velvety gold and crimson of classic lithography, he creates a 26-piece design showcase while reproducing certain static, monumental elements of art deco. Mayer's cover image and letter-A page, "All Aboard!," pictures a docked steamship. Upon closer inspection, readers see that the ship's hull, a diagonal gangplank and a supporting beam discreetly form a slant-sided A. "Landing" pictures silvery prop planes cruising on a floodlit runway that forms a wide L; "Tour" pictures the T-shaped red handlebars of a stylized black bicycle. The final page provides thumbnail versions of all the images, with broad white strokes that emphasize the letterforms within each composition. Some are obvious, like a railroad "X-ing." Others require scrutiny, like the I ("Island") formed by a beachgoer's skinny legs. Mayer successfully evokes the glamour of the Roaring Twenties, although his travel ABCs never quite get under way. The designs are consistent and uniform, but so self-contained they do not generate momentum; that said, individual images will attract their share of admirers. Ages 3-7. (Feb.)
Copyright 2007 Reed Business InformationEditorials
Publishers Weekly
Mayer (A Walk in the Rain with a Brain) creates a '20s-style travel poster for each letter in this elegant abecedary. Working in grainy airbrush gouache to mimic the steely blue, velvety gold and crimson of classic lithography, he creates a 26-piece design showcase while reproducing certain static, monumental elements of art deco. Mayer's cover image and letter-A page, "All Aboard!," pictures a docked steamship. Upon closer inspection, readers see that the ship's hull, a diagonal gangplank and a supporting beam discreetly form a slant-sided A. "Landing" pictures silvery prop planes cruising on a floodlit runway that forms a wide L; "Tour" pictures the T-shaped red handlebars of a stylized black bicycle. The final page provides thumbnail versions of all the images, with broad white strokes that emphasize the letterforms within each composition. Some are obvious, like a railroad "X-ing." Others require scrutiny, like the I ("Island") formed by a beachgoer's skinny legs. Mayer successfully evokes the glamour of the Roaring Twenties, although his travel ABCs never quite get under way. The designs are consistent and uniform, but so self-contained they do not generate momentum; that said, individual images will attract their share of admirers. Ages 3-7. (Feb.)
Copyright 2007 Reed Business InformationChildren's Literature -
In this alphabet book, each letter is paired with a travel-related word—an object or concept—which is the subject of a picture. B is for bridge, for example, and H is for highway. The pictures are executed in the style of classic travel posters of the 1920s, bold, colorful, and highly stylized. The jacket's inside flap copy invites readers to "discover something unexpected in each elegant picture puzzle," which turns out to be the letter of the alphabet that is in play in that particular picture. The "answers" are shown on the volume's back cover. Some of the letters are actually easy to miss, especially if readers skip the flap copy, because their incorporation into the design is so seamless. Stylistically, this is a sophisticated picture book. Adults are likely to be attracted to the artwork, which has a glossy, atmospheric aura. Children may find some of the images too static to be engrossing. Some of the choices of things or concepts to pair with letters seem a bit of a stretch for the book's asserted theme—like funnel for F, which is illustrated by the smokestack of a steamship. On the other hand, zeppelin for Z is perfect. For people of all ages who like alphabet books, this is a different take on an old standard, and enjoyable if sometimes slightly off the mark. Reviewer: Debbie LevySchool Library Journal
K-Gr 4- There is no story here, but kids fascinated with transportation might enjoy these travel-related images and hunting for the capital-letter shape embedded in each one. Mayer employs his expertise with airbrush and digital techniques to create striking super-graphic, poster-type pictures, one for each letter of the alphabet. "A" is in the architecture of an ocean liner's gangplank; a quarter-turn reveals "B" in the arches of a bridge; and clever cropping changes a cycle wheel into "C." Young children will need help to distinguish the sometimes esoterically integrated letters, while older ones (and adults) will appreciate details like the whirring effect in "CYCLE," the exotic flavor of the characters chosen to label an East Indian "ELEPHANT," the upward movement implied by the shaded lettering of JUMP, and the stunning use of shadow and reflection that gives dimension to every illustration. There's a summary page of solutions, with bold white tracings revealing each letter's location on a thumbnail reproduction. A vehicle for the art rather than the alphabet.-Kathy Krasniewicz, Perrot Library, Old Greenwich, CT
Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.