River

Elisha Cooper

Book - 2019

A woman in a canoe takes the reader on a journey down the Hudson River, from its source, a lake in the Adirondack Mountains, to the point where it flows into the Atlantic Ocean at New York City. Includes a note on the history of the Hudson River.

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Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
New York : Orchard Books 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Elisha Cooper (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations, color map ; 31 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781338312263
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Two children, accompanied by their father, wave as their mother sets off to travel 300 miles down the Hudson River on her solitary adventure. In the evenings, the woman writes and draws in her sketchbook, detailing her exploits after setting up camp for the night. Caldecott Honor Book creator Cooper offers short descriptive paragraphs that encapsulate the striking beauty and harrowing challenges she encounters. The moon climbs up among the stars. She is alone, but not. The river stays beside her, mumbling to her and to itself all through the night. Evocative watercolor illustrations show differing perspectives and vary from tiny vignettes to large double-spread paintings offering many details while remaining soft-edged. The woman paddles by numerous animals including otters, a bear cub, cows, a moose, and an eagle. She passes under various types of bridges on her journey and notices many different kinds of boats in New York Harbor. Though she faces many challenging situations rapids in a narrowing of the river, biting black flies, a strong wind that capsizes her canoe, and a tugboat that creates waves that endanger her and her small vessel she survives them all to rejoin her family at home. An author's note, sources, and information about the river round out this beautiful book.--Maryann Owen Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Seen from a distance, a woman in a canoe waves goodbye to people on the shore and sets out on a journey: "Three hundred miles stretch in front of her." She's paddling the Hudson River from the Adirondacks to the Atlantic Ocean. Sweeping pencil-and-watercolor layers trace rocks crowding the river and clouds crossing the sky. The woman's solitude is underscored in lyrical prose: "There is nothing in the world but her, the bird, this place. No one knows where she is." Cooper (Big Cat, Little Cat) makes the difficulties of the expedition clear: "She staggers--the canoe balancing on her shoulders--down the steep gravel path next to the dam. She trips, drops the canoe." When she reaches the city, lively scenes greet her as all kinds of traffic plies the waters around Manhattan. As she completes the last, most dangerous part of the voyage out to the Atlantic, readers share in the paddler's satisfaction. The woman changes during her journey, and the Hudson does, too, growing from mountain cataract to mighty waterway. An author's note fills in a bit about the river's history, but in this expansive, beautifully rendered offering, the attention is all on the voyage and the moments, tender and tense, that comprise it. Ages 4--8. (Oct.)

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Review by School Library Journal Review

PreS-Gr 3--Cooper loves to take children on experiential journeys, which he did so expertly in titles such as Train, Farm, and Beach. This time the excursion is on a mighty river--the Hudson--and the conveyance is a canoe. The book opens with a woman--the solo traveler--waving goodbye to her family and setting off from the headwaters of the river in the Adironacks on a 300-mile trek to New York Harbor. Such an ambitious outing takes extensive training and careful planning, but this woman is up to the task and there's no better way of appreciating the river ecosystem than this kind of up-close and intensely personal observation. Cooper captures it all in his gloriously expansive and fluid pencil and watercolor artwork in vignettes and full-bleed spreads. The woman's days consist largely of "paddling, sketching, eating, camping, and paddling again." She spots a variety of wildlife--moose, otters, mergansers, eagles, seals--crashes through a series of rapids, portages around a dam, and follows the locks at a waterfall. With each day's progress downriver, the countryside shifts from farmland to villages and larger towns. The woman has to think fast, takes her lumps in a squall, and paddles on until she reaches the city, and reunites with her family. Beyond her bragging rights, she has exhilarating stories to share and fond memories to hold onto, until her next adventure. VERDICT A marvelous vehicle for nature lovers, armchair travelers, and aspiring boaters and explorers.--Luann Toth, School Library Journal

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

A woman says goodbye to her family and begins a three-hundred-mile canoe journey down a river. "In her canoe: tent, sleeping bag, guidebook, map, life jacket, first-aid kit, waterproof duffle with food, clothes, water bottles, coffee pot, stove, lamp, book, pencils, a sketchbook." (No cellphone.) She paddles alone through rapids, portages around waterfalls, and sleeps outside every night, with Cooper's watercolor and pencil sketches illuminating the details of the trip with a rhythmic mix of vignettes and wide landscapes. The present-tense text focuses on the journey rather than the destination, with the second page asking, "Can she do this?" but otherwise choosing not to ask or answer any of the obvious questions that might spring to readers' minds: Why is she making this journey alone? What river is she on? Nevertheless, some answers can be found in the illustrations, particularly endpapers showing maps of the Hudson River from its source at Henderson Lake in the Adirondacks to its mouth at New York City Harbor; we learn even more by comparing two similarly staged scenes of the woman's entire family (placed before the title page and amidst the back matter). By the time she rejoins them, we have become so absorbed in her experience that, much as she had done on the river, we now notice every detail. Back matter includes an author's note ("I did not canoe down the Hudson River. I am not a capable enough canoer. Or a brave enough one"), a note about the Hudson, and a list of sources and further reading. Lolly Robinson November/December 2019 p.65(c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A woman travels the length of the Hudson River by canoe in Cooper's (Train, 2013) latest, a 12-inch-square picture book."Morning, a mountain lake. A traveler, a canoe." Cooper's text is spare in style yet detailed and lengthy: Paragraphs on each spread compete with pencil-and-watercolor illustrations that alternate among double-page panoramic landscapes of impressive views, smaller scenes against white space, and miniature vignettes of the faceless traveler in motion. The 300-mile solo journey itself begins with a question: "Can she do this?" A rock rises out of the waterno, "a moose." There are rapids to brave, thunder, cold, a bear cub to avoid, a dam around which to portage (such vocabulary is made clear in context), and many more challenges to face. There are also the peaceful joys of "paddling, sketching, eating, camping, paddling again," friendly faces at stops along the way, and the assurance that "she is strong, and she knows what she's doing." The myriad details about the journey will interest slightly older, outdoorsy children interested in adventure and travel. At the conclusion of this beautiful book, when the water-weary traveler ends her journey in the arms of her loved ones, ready to turn her sketches and words into paintings and a story, readers will feel they have traveled a journey themselves, and they just may wonder if they would ever have the strength, endurance, bravery and know-how to undertake such an endeavor themselves.Expansive content impressively and beautifully presented. (author's note, note on the Hudson River, sources, further reading, map) (Picture book. 6-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.