SLAP HAPPY LARRY

  • Short Story Study
  • Picturebooks
  • Privacy
  • The Monster At The End Of This Book

    The Monster At The End Of This Book

    October 13, 2020

    The Monster At The End Of This Book by Jon Stone and Michael Smolin (1971) is possibly the most successful of the Little Golden Books published starring Sesame Street characters.

    Continue reading

  • Scaredy Squirrel At The Beach by Melanie Watt Analysis

    Scaredy Squirrel At The Beach by Melanie Watt Analysis

    October 12, 2020

    Scaredy Squirrel At The Beach (2008) by Mélanie Watt is the third picture book in a series starring an anxious squirrel who deals with his fears.

    Continue reading

  • Frog Goes to Dinner by Mercer Mayer 1974 Analysis

    Frog Goes to Dinner by Mercer Mayer 1974 Analysis

    October 12, 2020

    Frog Goes To Dinner (1974) is a wordless carnivalesque picture book by American author/illustrator Mercer Mayer, and the fifth in a series about a boy and his beloved frog. Wordless picture books are perhaps the most emotionally affecting, because they work with us at a deeper level. Frog Goes To Dinner works on an emotional…

    Continue reading

  • The Art Of Nightmares

    The Art Of Nightmares

    October 8, 2020

    Some dreams, some poems, some musical phrases, some pictures, wake feelings such as one never had before, new in colour and form—spiritual sensations, as it were, hitherto unproved… Lilith | George MacDonald How does an artist offer the viewer a sense of nightmare? Desaturation Over all, 12 percent of people dream entirely in black and white. … In…

    Continue reading

  • The Treatment of Curiosity Across Storytelling

    October 7, 2020

    Are we supposed to be curious, or aren’t we? From reading stories, I just can’t make up my mind.

    Continue reading

  • How Photography Changed Picturebooks

    How Photography Changed Picturebooks

    October 6, 2020

    The first commercial camera is thought to be the daguerreotype, which changed art forever starting in 1839. To generalise, the function of painting changed after that. Before the camera, artists functioned as photographers do today; the skill of authentic reproduction was highly valued because there was no other way of recording something than to paint…

    Continue reading

  • The Cat At Night by Dahlov Ipcar (1969)

    October 5, 2020

    The Cat At Night is a picture book written and illustrated by Amrican Dahlov Ipcar (1969). Like many children’s authors and illustrators, she lived a long life (1917-2017).

    Continue reading

  • Creating A Fairytale World

    October 4, 2020

    To a modern audience, what makes a setting feel ‘fairytale’? What is it about the tone, style and plot? I argue here that what makes a fairytale setting feel ‘fairytale’ is mostly the ‘fairytale logic’. Just as we know, almost intuitively, that a particular narrative is a fairy tale when we read it, it seems…

    Continue reading

  • Childhood Horror: Why are kid things so scary?

    Childhood Horror: Why are kid things so scary?

    October 4, 2020

    Here’s the thing about horror: It can so easily turn into accidental comedy. Watch the original 1960s Twilight Zone series and what was once genuinely scary now offers a family-night laugh. An inverse is also true: What we once considered fun, innocent, cosy and child-friendly will morph over time into something sinister. In the second…

    Continue reading

  • Wheel On The Chimney by Wise Brown and Gergely 1954

    Wheel On The Chimney by Wise Brown and Gergely 1954

    October 3, 2020

    Wheel On The Chimney is a calm, bird-focused storified description of an old custom observed throughout various parts of Southern Europe.

    Continue reading

  • The Harlequin and The Circus

    The Harlequin and The Circus

    October 2, 2020

    Why is the triangle/diamond/lozenge shape associated with the circus? For the answer, we need to go back more than 500 years.

    Continue reading

  • The Storybook Jungle

    The Storybook Jungle

    October 1, 2020

    To invading germs, you are a jungle full of hungry tigers. To your gut bacteria, you are a warm orchard of perpetual bounty. To your eyelash mites, you are a walking fortress and a mountaintop pasture. How many generations have you hosted? What do they name the wilderness of you? “Host” by @cryptonature, in his…

    Continue reading

  • Anatole by Eve Titus & Paul Galdone (1956)

    Anatole by Eve Titus & Paul Galdone (1956)

    September 30, 2020

    Anatole the mouse starred in a series of children’s stories by Eve Titus, illustrated by Paul Galdone in blue, red and white. The ten books were published 1956-1979. Today I’m taking a look at the picture book that opened the series. Anatole was named a Caldecott honour book.

    Continue reading

  • Words to Describe Landscapes, Landforms, Water and Construction

    Words to Describe Landscapes, Landforms, Water and Construction

    September 30, 2020

    (Includes bodies of water.) You may be after a full glossary of landforms, in which case the Wikipedia article is comprehensive: Full list of landforms at Wikipedia. This post skews literary.

    Continue reading

  • Gila Monsters Meet You at the Airport by Marjorie Weinman Sharmat and Byron Barton Analysis

    Gila Monsters Meet You at the Airport by Marjorie Weinman Sharmat and Byron Barton Analysis

    September 29, 2020

    Gila Monsters Meet You at the Airport (1980) is an American picture book written by Marjorie Weinman Sharmat and illustrated by Byron Barton.

    Continue reading

Previous Page
1 … 35 36 37 38 39 … 109
Next Page

SLAP HAPPY LARRY

Proudly powered by WordPress