Harbor

Donald Crews

Book - 1987

Presents various kinds of boats which come and go in a busy harbor.

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Subjects
Genres
Fiction
Illustrated works
Published
New York : Mulberry Books 1987, ©1982.
Language
English
Main Author
Donald Crews (-)
Edition
1st Mulberry ed
Physical Description
32 unnumbered pages : chiefly color illustrations ; 21 x 25 cm
Audience
480
ISBN
9780833507006
9780688073329
9781442014053
9780812456639
9780022437060
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The colors are muted, grayed--but that's not the only way Crews' new book differs from Freight Train, Truck, etc. For one thing, it's mostly an album of types of ships found in a harbor, each precisely rendered. The types are identified on a page of silhouetted ""Ship Shapes"" at the close--which the parent asked ""what's this?"" might have liked to know about at the beginning. That's especially true of the occasional spread that names several types without identifying them (e.g., ""Liners, tankers, tugboats, barges, and freighters""). A similar problem of knowing what's what occurs with the opening spread: we see the harbor whole, read the words ""Wharves, docks, piers, and warehouses""--but how many adults can distinguish between a wharf, a pier, and a dock? (As it happens, the one label, ""Harbor Piers,"" is on the pier buildings--which some might interpret as warehouses.) The reason these fine points matter is that, spread by spread, there is almost no conceptual content; the two exceptions are a scene of identical tugboats going in opposite directions (""They do not need to turn around. The back becomes the front""); and a scene of two tugs and two barges which clearly illustrates ""Tugs push. Tugs tow."" As for the visual excitement, it's concentrated at the close--when we see a fireboat, ""ready for an emergency"" at the dock, then shoot water in all directions. . . for ""a celebration."" Much of this, however, approaches the here-and-now norm--executed with greater flair. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.