This book is gray

Lindsay Ward

Book - 2019

Gray just wants to be included. But the other colors are always leaving him out. So he decides to create his own project: an all-gray book. Once upon a time, there lived a wolf, a kitten, and a hippo... Gray just knows it's going to be perfect. But as he adds page after page, the Primary and Secondary colors show up...and they aren't quite so complimentary.

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jE/Ward
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Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
New York : Two Lions [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Lindsay Ward (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 29 x 23 cm
ISBN
9781542043403
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Since the other colors always exclude him, Gray decides to make his own book. He starts by introducing a wolf, a kitten, and a hippo who live in a small house by the sea. But when the primary colors barge in, Gray must defend his color from accusations of being ""dismal, bleak, and gloomy."" Meanwhile, the secondary colors further disrupt Gray's storytelling assuming the worst simply due to his color (or perceived lack thereof) and attempt to add themselves to the story. Fellow achromatics Black and White also inject themselves into the illustrations, which provokes Gray to shout that he is a cool color, too, yet is left out all the time. Chastened, the other colors apologize and ask if they can help. In the end, the other colors contribute to the illustration and support Gray, whose characters end up living ""grayly ever after."" This book is a fun introduction to color theory that may inspire children to use more gray in their artwork and remind them to include friends who are left out.--Michelle Young Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review

K-Gr 2--Gray is miffed about the fact that primary and secondary colors get all of the attention. Feeling left out and tired of being typecast as a dull, gloomy, sad sack, he decides to create the "GRAYtest book ever." Gray spins a tale about a hippo, wolf, and kitten who live in a house by the sea, all presented in a completely muted palette. In metafictional fashion, a rainbow of colors barge into his story and offer their editorial opinions. Looking like triangular wedges from a color wheel, all of the hues in Ward's digital illustrations have distinct personalities and signature accessories: peppy, ponytailed Yellow has sunglasses perched on her head; Red wears a pom-pom hat and a sardonic expression; and Blue is a laid-back dude with a backwards ball cap. Dialogue bubbles capture the pun-filled, quick-witted banter that ricochets all across the pages as Gray tries to maintain control ("Just because I'm not a primary or secondary doesn't mean I'm not a color! Achromatics have feelings, too, ya know"), while his bolder pals throw shade ("What muted his hue?"). After an emotional plea for acceptance, the others finally see Gray's true colors, and they come up with a way to let him take center stage. VERDICT A colorful primer on relationships and how to complement one another.--Linda Ludke, London Public Library, Ont.

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

A gray character tries to write an all-gray book.The six primary and secondary colors are building a rainbow, each contributing the hue of their own body, and Gray feels forlorn and left out because rainbows contain no gray. So Graywho, like the other characters, has a solid, triangular body, a doodle-style face, and stick limbssets off alone to create "the GRAYest book ever." His book inside a book shows a peaceful gray cliff house near a gray sea with gentle whitecaps; his three gray charactershippo, wolf, kittenwait for their arc to begin. But then the primaries arrive and call the gray scene "dismal, bleak, and gloomy." The secondaries show up too, and soon everyone's overrunning Gray's creation. When Gray refuses to let White and Black participate, astute readers will note the flaw: White and black (the colors) had already been included in the early all-gray spreads. Ironically, Gray's book within a book displays calm, passable art while the metabook's unsubtle illustrations and sloppy design make for cramped and crowded pages that are too busy to hold visual focus. The speech-bubble dialogue's snappy enough (Blue calls people "dude," and there are puns). A convoluted moral muddles the core artistic questionwhether a whole book can be grayand instead highlights a trite message about working together.Low grade. (glossary) (Picture book. 4-6) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.