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Poetry - Assorted Topics
Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star by Jane Taylor β€” book cover

Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star

by Jane Taylor, Sharon Lane Holm
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Overview

This familiar children's song will get the youngest children turning pages and remembering the words. What better way to set your child on the road

In this version of the familiar nineteenth-century poem, the illustrations depict Santa Claus and his elves following a star to the home of two children who eagerly await their visit.

Synopsis

This familiar children's song will get the youngest children turning pages and remembering the words. What better way to set your child on the road

Publishers Weekly

Intricately detailed, Victorian-style illustrations highlight this version of the beloved nursery tune, originally published in 1806. (The song, including its lesser-known later verses, comprises the book's entire text.) It seems a somewhat curious choice for Hague, the noted illustrator of such classics as Peter Pan and The Secret Garden , as its lyrics are too insubstantial to function as a storybook; they are clearly intended, rather, to serve as a backdrop for Hague's rococo artwork. In his characteristic style, which recalls the delicate magic of Arthur Rackham, Hague renders the nursery rhyme as an enchanted dream in which winged fairies guide two sleepy children through a sky shimmering with stars. Piloting a tiny boat on the celestial seas, the boy and girl pass a smiling crescent moon, mermaids with flowing hair and benevolent gnomes before they are guided safely back to bed. Although Hague does his best to create a visual story from a non-narrative text, this slight volume is ultimately a collection of attractive but discrete pictures, a coffee-table book for children sure to please the artist's many fans. All ages. (Sept.)

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Intricately detailed, Victorian-style illustrations highlight this version of the beloved nursery tune, originally published in 1806. (The song, including its lesser-known later verses, comprises the book's entire text.) It seems a somewhat curious choice for Hague, the noted illustrator of such classics as Peter Pan and The Secret Garden , as its lyrics are too insubstantial to function as a storybook; they are clearly intended, rather, to serve as a backdrop for Hague's rococo artwork. In his characteristic style, which recalls the delicate magic of Arthur Rackham, Hague renders the nursery rhyme as an enchanted dream in which winged fairies guide two sleepy children through a sky shimmering with stars. Piloting a tiny boat on the celestial seas, the boy and girl pass a smiling crescent moon, mermaids with flowing hair and benevolent gnomes before they are guided safely back to bed. Although Hague does his best to create a visual story from a non-narrative text, this slight volume is ultimately a collection of attractive but discrete pictures, a coffee-table book for children sure to please the artist's many fans. All ages. (Sept.)

Children's Literature - Susie Wilde

Here is a book that will help you to forget the panic of Christmas and relax for a few minutes to experience the enchantment your children see. Jane Taylor's original poem Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star finds new meaning when Julia Noonan illustrates it with a Christmas interpretation. Her rich paintings follow one star that helps two small children and guides Santa to their hearts' desires.

Book Details

Published
September 1, 2010
Publisher
Child's World, Incorporated, The
Pages
16
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781602535336

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