About the Author:
In her own words: "born. bucolic childhood. culture-stuffed adolescence. played piano. stopped. danced. stopped. wrote. discarded writing. drew. reinstated writing. married Tibor Kalman and collaborated at iconoclastic yet successful design studio. wrote and painted children's books. worried. took up Ping-Pong. relaxed. wrote and painted for many magazines. cofounded the Rubber Band Society. amused. children: two. dog: one."
From School Library Journal:
Grade 3 Up?Max the dog is on the move again! This time, impending fatherhood catapults him out of his chair in search of "the stinky herring snacks" his darling pregnant wife Crepes craves. Hairy Harry's Fish Shop is his intended destination?but not, alas, his destiny. When a woman on the subway hands him a piece of paper?a personal invitation to the Magic Lantern Restaurant?Max, opener of doors, attends. And so, Max meets Vivek ("your genial genie, your garrulous guru, your suave swami"). With him, Max soars toward India on a small carpet and from his new transcendent vantage point looks down with awe at the array of life in the streets below. And readers see it too, in warm rich earth tones and generous strokes of bright color, a double-page painting inviting readers into "I-Spy," as Kalman's text rolls out a litany of descriptions to match the images. Each subsequent page offers a new turn down Max's path to enlightenment?through bits of wordplay and allusion, geography and history, philosophy and poetry, fun and games; through vivid paintings small as postage stamps, framed pictures formal and arresting, images expansive and fanciful. This guided tour is inventive and personal, but, best of all, beyond Max's madcap meanderings there emerges a sense of humor that comes from a knowledge and appreciation of Indian culture. Is this a book for children or an adult picture book? Of course art finds its own audience and those who appreciate Kalman's talents may bring a range of responses to a reading?sophistication, insight, life experience, or a child's simple openness to the surprising way words and images and ideas create mysterious and amusing worlds upon a page. True, this is a book beyond children, in a sense, but it is also one that speaks to all who "enter in." As Max might say, "Whatabook!"?Susan Powers, Rock Creek Forest Elementary School, Chevy Chase,
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