Grasshopper

Tatiana Ukhova

Book - 2021

In this colorful and moving wordless picture book told from the up-close perspectives of a young girl and a grasshopper, a garden comes alive with creatures, plants, and surprises of nature.

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Subjects
Genres
Picture books for children
Nature fiction
Wordless picture books
Picture books
Published
Vancouver : Greystone Kids, Greystone Books [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Tatiana Ukhova (illustrator)
Item Description
"An Aldana Libros book."
"Originally published in Russia in 2019 by Samokat Publishing House."
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 29 cm
Audience
NP
ISBN
9781771646925
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A wordless story by Russian artist Ukhova imagines a red-haired, pink-skinned child with freckles blundering into a small universe beneath their feet. Sunbathing amid lush green growth, and sporting a comically large pair of sunglasses, they are initially annoyed with ants discovering their nose, then begin studying the ants and anthill. They first spy a green caterpillar--introducing it to the ants leads to its untimely end--and then a scarablike blue beetle that flies in unpredictable directions, making a path through the air that's traced in scriptlike curlicues. Then the child finds the grasshopper, seen in dramatic close-up. It's not just interesting; it's downright glamorous, with flashy red legs and threadlike antennae. The child gives it a home, and a companion--but not for long. Ukhova works in broad painted lines, bathing everything in vibrant color and capturing the protagonist's quickly changing emotions--dismay, amazement, absorption, fondness--as the wild animals, the human included, engage in a display of nature's chaotic nature. Instead of an idealized view of a young expert at work, Ukhova's child acts out of believable curiosity and impulse, and is observed as closely by readers as the insects. Ages 4--7. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Horn Book Review

In this wordless Russian import that explores themes of freedom, scale, and perspective, a girl rests on a backyard blanket under a bright blue sky. Ants wander onto her nose, leading her to discover an anthill, and then a caterpillar, a beetle, and even more critters. After she catches a grasshopper and places it inside a large terrarium jar, the book's perspective shifts briefly, with images shown in a hexagonal honeycomb pattern showcasing what can be interpreted as the grasshopper's memories of freedom. When another grasshopper is added to the jar, a fight ensues. A black cat appears and shatters the jar by knocking it to the ground while the girl distractedly swings on a tree swing. This frees the wrangling creatures and brings nature into balance. While the story spotlights its natural setting, elements of the human-made world (houses, an airplane in the sky, etc.) are ever-present. Vibrant blues and greens abound in the art, with lots of shadows and implied panels to pace the unpredictable and playful narrative. Lines are rendered in a variety of colors, creating a striking contrast between figure outlines and negative space; the bright white of the page, for example, is used for the protagonist's skin tone as well as the neighborhood structures. (c) Copyright 2023. 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

Nature's miniature whimsies bloom in Ukhova's wordless picture-book debut, imported from Russia. A far-off white airplane slips across the rich blue sky as a pale White child rests on a blanket in the middle of a lush green garden. An apple core sits just near their head, overtaken by a squadron of ants. The ants soon crawl over to the child's face. Intrigued, the child walks over to the anthill. A caterpillar stirs in a pea pod when the child disturbs it, dropping it right beside the anthill. It happens in a series of seconds: The ants overtake the caterpillar and drag their spoils into their home. The child sees it all, with a look of dismay creeping onto their face. The caterpillar's demise plays out over just a few pages, and it ends almost as soon as it starts, but Ukhova mitigates the small-scale viciousness of the scene thanks to her use of a color palette full of gorgeous greens and blues and a restrained approach to the subject matter made insightful by the absence of text. When the child captures a grasshopper, tearing off one of its legs in the process, the grasshopper's scooped into a jar to spare it from the same end that befell the caterpillar. Inside the clear jar, the grasshopper's world reveals itself in all its reliefs and dangers. Through all that happens, the child learns about the effects of their actions on the natural world, and it's a lesson worth imparting here. Marvelously astute. (Picture book. 4-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.