The size of the font changes as her anger grows and abates. It is just so powerful. The words themselves tumble down the page, and their placement and size, as well as their meaning, effectively at generates the girl's spirit of rage and anger.
So many picture books have words that paint pictures just as much as the illustrations. I should make a bigger effort to record books that do this for me. I remember reading Ed and Rebecca Emberley's The Ant and the Grasshopper and being astounded by the opening word image.
Somewhere on the boulevard of backyards an ant was struggling with the remnants of a picnic.
I doubt that many of my early readers would fully understand the meaning of the words 'boulevard' and 'remnants' within this context, but would I therefore not read the book to them, or worse still stop to explain what it means. Of course not. I would read the story and allow them to hear amazing vocabulary and maybe unpack it much later when we have enjoyed the story and the illustrations as a whole.
I have a box of 'word' books in the library for teachers and students to borrow for their reading and writing mentor lessons, but many of these books are more about collecting words and varying words than the beauty of them. See what is in the box here. This Pinterest page is obviously about more than just sharing picture book titles, but in amongst other things there are plenty of books to hunt out.
Among my favourites:
Phileas's Fortune by Agnes de Lestrade and Valeria Docampo
The Word Wizard by Cathryn Falwell
The Word Collector by Peter Reynolds
One Word Pearl by Nicole Groeneweg and Hazel Mitchell
It is such a shame we are on holidays and I cannot do a display or plan a lesson. I would read
One Word From Sophia by Jim Averbeck and Yasmeen Ismail.
What is the 'one word'?
My favourite words are archipelago, serendipity and balderdash.
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