My city speaks

Darren Lebeuf

Book - 2021

"A young girl explores her city with her father, taking in all its sensory details. Her city speaks to her in so many ways: "sometimes it echoes," and "sometimes it trills." It "buzzes and tweets and flocks." It's both "busy" and "relaxed," and "smelly" and "sweet." In the end, we discover that the city doesn't just speak to this inquisitive young girl - it also listens ... Author Darren Lebeuf, an award-winning photographer, uses spare text and a rhythmic style to create an evocative read-aloud. The vivid adjectives, both concrete and abstract, will inspire children to try to capture in words what they notice not only in their own town or city, but in any ...setting. The bright, richly colored cut-paper collage illustrations by Ashley Barron add a captivating visual texture and depth to the story. The portrayal of a girl with a visual impairment walking through the city on her way to her violin recital offers a character education lesson in adaptability."--

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jE/Lebeuf
2 / 2 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jE/Lebeuf Checked In
Children's Room jE/Lebeuf Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Children's stories Pictorial works
Picture books
Published
Toronto, ON : Kids Can Press [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Darren Lebeuf (author)
Other Authors
Ashley Barron (illustrator)
Item Description
"Edited by Jennifer Stokes"--Page preceding title page.
Physical Description
32 unnumbered pages : color illustrations ; 24 cm
Audience
AD450L
Awards
A Junior Library Guild selection, 2021.
Schneider Family Book Award, Young Children, 2022.
ISBN
9781525304149
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Don't flip to the end and spoil the surprise (revealed in the blue bag Dad carries) as a blind, brown-skinned girl takes a journey with her dad in her busy city. Engaging all her senses, she must hear the city "speak" to "see" it in her mind. Using her cane, she navigates street crossings, curbs, and crowds while the city "rushes and stops . . . waits and goes . . . opens and shuts." On their trip, they feed the pigeons, play with dogs and kids at the playground, lick an ice cream cone, and ride the subway. Hasty honks, distant chimes, reliable rumbles, speedy sirens, and urgent clangs provide background noises as the pair make their way to their destination at a park for a concert performance. As for that surprise? Our talented girl is the solo violinist! The joyful artwork in cut-paper collage, watercolor, and acrylic gives a tactile pop to the colorful hustle and bustle of a child's day. A positive book featuring a blind character embracing her full life.

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

A blind child introduces readers to their city en route to a violin recital. Accompanied by their dad, they step out, white cane in hand. In simple, declarative sentences dotted with vivid adjectives and verbs, they narrate the many ways their city "speaks." "It rushes and stops / and waits and goes" as they navigate a pedestrian crossing. It "grows" as they stroke a sunflower and construction workers build nearby. It's "busy" as they feed a flock of pigeons and "relaxed" as they lounge with their dad on a park bench. "Sometimes it's smelly," they note as they pass a dumpster, and "sometimes it's sweet" as they sample ice cream flavors. It "speaks with whispers and giggles and sometimes meows" as they ride a subway crowded with racially and ethnically diverse passengers. As they cross one more busy street, it "also speaks with hasty honks, impatient beeps, distant chimes, reliable rumbles, speedy sirens and urgent clangs." "My city speaks," they repeat, joining fellow musicians on an outdoor stage, "and sometimes it just listens" as they serenade an appreciative crowd. In a warm finale, the narrator and their dad embrace, beaming. With cheerful, doll-like human figures, Barron's bright illustrations highlight the quiet tenderness between father and child--a rarely represented duo in books featuring disabled characters. The narrator and their dad have brown skin. (This book was reviewed digitally.) A celebration of city life's sounds, sensations, and faces. (Picture book. 4-7) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.