fbpx
Gleebooks Bookshop
Free Call

Blackout

$26.00

Blackout

SKU: 9781423121909 Category: Product ID: 355712

Description

Temporarily out of stock

Title: Blackout
Author: ROCCO JOHN
Format: HARDCOVER
Publication date: 24/05/2011
Imprint: HYPERION PRESS
Price: $26.00
Publishing status: Active

Awards:
Caldecott Medal | Honor Book | Picture Book | 2012 – 2012 ;
Cybils | Finalist | Fiction Picture Book | 2011 – 2011
Golden Archer Award | Winner | Primary | 2013 – 2013 ;
Florida Children’s Book Award | Nominee | Pre K – 2nd Grade | 2013 – 2013 ; North Carolina Children’s Book Award | Nominee | Picture Book | 2013 – 2013 ; Texas 2×2 Reading List | Recommended | Children’s | 2012 – 2012 ; Capitol Choices: Noteworthy Books for Children and Teens | Recommended | Up to Seven | 2012 – 2012 ; Black-Eyed Susan Award | Nominee | Picture Book | 2012 – 2013 ; Monarch Award | Nominee | Grades K-3 | 2013 – 2013 ; Beehive Awards | Nominee | Picture | 2013 – 2013 ; Ladybug Picture Book Award | Nominee | Children’s Picture | 2012 – 2012 ; Red Clover Award | Nominee | Picture Book | 2013 – 2013 ; Georgia Children’s Book Award | Nominee | Picture Storybook | 2014 – 2014 ; Young Hoosier Book Award | Nominee | Picture Book | 2014 – 2014 ; Arkansas Diamond Primary Book Award | Nominee | Grades K-3 | 2013 – 2014 ; Star of the North Picture Book Award | Nominee | Grades K-2 | 2013 – 2014 ; Volunteer State Book Awards | Nominee | Primary | 2013 – 2014 ; Nevada Young Readers’ Award | Nominee | Picture Book | 2014 – 2014

One hot summer night in the city, all the power goes out. The TV shuts off and a boy wails, \”Mommm!\” His sister can no longer use the phone, Mom can’t work on her computer, and Dad can’t finish cooking dinner. What’s a family to do? When they go up to the roof to escape the heat, they find the lights–in stars that can be seen for a change–and so many neighbors it’s like a block party in the sky! On the street below, people are having just as much fun–talking, rollerblading, and eating ice cream before it melts. The boy and his family enjoy being not so busy for once. They even have time to play a board game together. When the electricity is restored, everything can go back to normal . . . but not everyone likes normal. The boy switches off the lights, and out comes the board game again.Using a combination of panels and full bleed illustrations that move from color to black-and-white and back to color, John Rocco shows that if we are willing to put our cares aside for a while, there is party potential in a summer blackout.

Publishers Weekly (03/07/2011):
Rocco’s sublime account of a city blackout reveals a bittersweet truth: it sometimes takes a crisis to bring a family together. In a series of graphic novel style panels, a small child tries to convince family members to play a board game one hot summer night, but they’re all too busy. When the lights go out, though, the neighborhood comes alive and the whole family drifts up to the roof to look at the stars: \”It was a block party in the sky.\” Rocco (Fu Finds the Way) gets everything right: the father’s pained, sheepish smile when he says he has no time to play; the velvety dark and glowing candlelight of the blackout (as well as the sense of magic that can accompany one); and the final solution to the problem of a too-busy family (a private blackout, courtesy of a light switch). The high-energy visuals that characterize Rocco’s other work get dialed back a little. In the most poignant spread, the family sits on the stoop, eating ice cream: \”And no one was busy at all.\” It’s a rare event these days. Ages 4 8. (May) Copyright 2011 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews (04/15/2011):
\”It started out as a normal summer night\”—until the lights go out, citywide.
When it gets \”too hot and sticky\” inside their apartment (no fans or AC tonight), one busy family (mom, dad, two girls and a black cat) heads to the rooftop of their building, where they find light via stars and a block party \”in the sky.\” Other parties are happening down on the street, too. When the lights come back on, everything returns to normal, except for this family, which continues to enjoy the dark. The plot line, conveyed with just a few sentences, is simple enough, but the dramatic illustrations illuminate the story. Beginning with the intriguing cover—the silhouetted family on their rooftop under a vast, dark-blue sky dotted with Starry Night–type swirls, black is used as both a backdrop and a highlighter. Page composition effectively intermingles boxed pages and panels with double-page spreads, generating action. Brilliantly designed, with comic bits such as a portrait of Edison on a wall and the cat running from a hand shadow of a dog.
Not all young readers will have experienced a blackout, but this engaging snapshot could easily have them wishing for one. (Picture book. 5-8)
(COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

Bulletin of Ctr for Child Bks (06/01/2011):
On a hot night in the city, everyone in the family is busy with their own activities-too busy to play with the young girl hoping for a partner in a board game. When the electricity suddenly goes out, however, the busy family slows down; at first \”huddled around flashlights and candles\” together, they’re then driven by the heat to the apartment-building roof, where they discover a power-free block party in progress and a sky full of stars usually bleached out by city glow. Then there’s another party down in the street, where the philosophical ice-cream vendor gives her treats away and the firefighters open up a hydrant, so it’s a bit of a disappointment when the lights come back on. While the real-life version of this would probably just send the wireheads in the family to their smart phones, it’s an enticing premise nonetheless. Author-illustrator Rocco effectively employs the text as voiceover narration (\”So we went up and up and up to the rooftop\”) for the drama that unfolds visually, and the simple, straightforward words, in font recalling In the Night Kitchen and crawled across the full-bleed art or neatly boxed, play their supporting role tactfully. Rocco interestingly goes for solidity rather than ethereality with his visual style: the family is a robust little crew, with authentic touches in demeanor (older sister has a sulky preteen slouch) and in their behavior in the dark (a lot of shadow-puppetry in the flashlight’s glow, some opportunistic handholding by Mom and Dad). Colors are understandably shadowy (textured with intriguingly geometric hatching lines), but there’s a clever balance of cool and warm in the spreads, and the inventive perspectives and panel sequences keep the energy high despite the late hour. This will be a nice reassurance for kids afraid of the dark, and most audiences will simply relish the notion of a spontaneous old-timey party. DS

Booklist (06/01/2011):
Preschool-G It’s a scenario many kids are probably all too familiar with: a young boy wants to play, but older sis is gabbing on the phone, Mom is busy on the computer, and Dad is making dinner. When the power goes out, however, the family comes together to make shadow puppets on the wall, join the neighbors on the roof to admire the stars, and even head out front to the most idyllic city street you’ll ever see. All good things come to an end, though. The power comes back on, and everyone immediately slips back into walled-off family unitsthough the walls are a bit weaker now. Compositionally, this picture book bears a strong resemblance to Maurice Sendak’s In the Night Kitchen (1970), breaking some of the pages into comics-style panels and running a boxed narrative up top. Rocco’s lustrous, animation-quality artwork somehow manages to get richer the darker it gets, and features one of the silkiest skies since Van Gogh’s Starry Night. A versatile reminder to take a break and invest in quality together time once in a while.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

School Library Journal (07/01/2011):
PreS-Gr 2—The view inside this family of four’s duplex depicts what might be a typical night for them. The younger child is reaching for a board game, her older sister is talking on the phone, dad is cooking, and mom is working at the computer. When the girl tries to enlist the others to play the game with her, they’re all too busy—until \”The lights went out. All of them.\” It’s a blackout! At first, the family members sit at the kitchen table with a flashlight and some candles; then they head up to the roof for a look at the bright stars against the dark cityscape; and, finally, they go down to the street, where there’s a festive atmosphere of guitars playing, free ice cream, and an open fire hydrant. In the end, readers will see that simple pleasures and a spirit of togetherness can be enjoyed even when the electricity comes back on. The colorful pictures work beautifully with the book’s design. Rocco uses comic-strip panels and a brief text to convey the atmosphere of a lively and almost magical urban landscape. Great bedtime reading for a soft summer night.—\”Lauralyn Persson, Wilmette Public Library, IL\” Copyright 2011 Reed Business Information.

Hornbook Guide to Children (07/01/2011):
One summer night, when there’s a blackout in the city, a family abandons its electrical gadgets and spends time together, venturing outside to join a spontaneous neighborhood party. After the electricity comes back on, everyone decides to ignore it and play a board game instead. The comic strip format enhances the spare text, while the illustrations are dramatically illuminated by candles and flashlights. (Copyright 2011 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)
This Caldecott Honor Book is similar to a graphic novel with is text features and speech bubbles. The beautiful illustrations, focusing on light and dark, start out with a girl wanting to play a board game, but everyone is too busy to play with her. (Think Hello, Hello.) So she ends up playing video games by herself until the power goes out and the family is forced to spend time together. That is, until the lights come back on, then they go back to what they were doing before. Slyly, the girl decides to turn the lights off herself to get her family together to play the board game. Blackout showcases the importance of family and connections in a digital world

ISBN: 9781423121909
Weight: 481g
Dimension: 286mm X 240mm
Pages: 40

Additional information

Weight 481 g
Dimensions 286 × 240 mm