| Here is a book Author: Cooper, Elisha | ||
| Price: $23.28 | ||
Summary:
The life of a picture book begins in the artist's studio, journeys through the world of publishing, finds itself on a bookshelf, and lands in the home of a young reader.
Reviews:
Kirkus Reviews (03/15/25)
School Library Journal (03/01/25)
Booklist (+) (12/01/25)
The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books (+) (00/04/25)
The Hornbook (00/05/25)
Full Text Reviews:
Other - 02/03/2025 In a winningly granular work that shows how components make up a whole, Caldecott Honoree Cooper uses list-forward lines and thumbnail-like sketches to trace a book’s creation, from inspiration onward. An artist, a tiny form briefly outlined, sits sketching outside a seaside cottage, penciled images flying forth. Indoors, her art studio overflows with "paper, pencils, watercolors, brushes, sketches, drafts, a wastebasket." Miniature vignettes show the figure painting, wielding a pencil, considering images on the wall. Finally, the finished manuscript heads to a publisher’s office ("editors, designers, assistants") and then to a printer ("printing presses, binding machines, glue"). Sweeping vistas next follow the finished volume’s journey to a city school library, where it at last reaches a reader. The child’s imagination is set alight, and, surrounded by classic picture books, the reader sits down with a sketchbook and forms a new stream of images. It’s a step-by-step representation of how a book comes into being, focused on how much depends on "teamwork, time, beauty, adventure, grit, inspiration, curiosity, action, structure, humor, wonder, and love." Characters are portrayed with various skin tones. Ages 4-8. (Apr.) - Copyright 2025
School Library Journal - 03/01/2025 PreS-Gr 2—Caldecott honoree Cooper has crafted a lovely tribute to the process that brings books from creative and talented minds into the hands of children, inspiring further creation. Sweeping illustrations and small spot art, done in watercolor and pencil, capture the experience of an illustrator creating a book, delivering it to their editor, and the book going through the manufacturing process and out into the world to be shelved and eventually taken home by a young person. The use of faceless characters nudges readers to find themselves under the influence of a beautiful story and may encourage them to create one themselves. For a look into the global production process, Polly Faber's Special Delivery: A Book's Journey Around the World could be a worthy complement to this title. Curiously, while the details of production are not the focus of this text, it is worth noting that the production phase features a printing factory with a large American flag in the art while the copyright page of Cooper's book is itself is marked "printed and bound in China." VERDICT Focused on capturing the creative process and its power to, in turn, inspire further creation, this title is broad in scope; the wide landscapes and tight vignettes will encourage young people to find the stories around themselves in places large and small.—John Scott - Copyright 2025 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.
Booklist - 04/01/2025 *Starred Review* Full of literal and figurative meaning, this book is presented as a physical object, and this book explains both the creative and the business process for making a book, tracing its journey from artist’s sketches to a child’s room. The cover illustration introduces the nested concept with hands holding a book; the back cover of the book repeats the image within the image. Opening with the artist’s home and some details of her life, we see how the drawings begin. We are given a peek into the artist’s garden, kitchen, and studio as she works. She bicycles into town to deliver the art to the publisher’s office, then the book travels from publisher to printer to truck to city to school. When the book arrives in the child’s hands, we see her neighborhood, home, kitchen, and family, providing the opposite bookend to the details about the artist. The glimpses into their lives are given texture by the watercolor-and-pencil illustrations, which include homages to famous children’s books. Each word of the brief text is chosen with care, adding specific details. The descriptive phrases often end with an emphasis word—something to make the reader stop and ponder. Those special words are gathered up at the end, bringing the parts of the book’s journey together into one unified message. - Copyright 2025 Booklist.



