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The Neighborhood Mother Goose

AUTHOR: Nina Crews (Illustrator)
ISBN: 0060515732

SHORT DESCRIPTION: Every day, children the world over sing, shout, and celebrate Mother Goose rhymes. And now there's a new reason to cheer: Nina Crews has added her own remarkable, jazzy style of illustration to a collection of forty-one favorite verses. Whether...

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Nursery Rhymes
         Editorial Review

The Neighborhood Mother Goose
- Book Review,
by Nina Crews (Illustrator)

From Booklist
*Starred Review* PreS. Nina Crews' clear, beautiful color photographs and computer manipulations bring children close-up to people like them. In this modern Mother Goose, she uses computer tools to combine photos of joyful kids in her Brooklyn neighborhood with all kinds of scenarios, realistic and wild. In "Hey diddle diddle!" a brooding cat holding a violin watches a boy running on the sidewalk, while a silver spoon looms over a wooden fence and a cow walks in the air above a full moon. In contrast, the illustration for "Pat-a-Cake" is homey and real: two girls clap hands in a front of a bakery window. The child's sense of being small in a world of giants is beautifully captured in the double-page spread of tiny kids jumping in a giant shoe. Realism, of course, has never been part of the Mother Goose nonsense drama, but preschoolers will enjoy seeing kids like themselves in pictures that make the familiar rhymes part of imaginative fun on the city sidewalk, where girls and boys come out to ride their scooters and bikes, play ball, and dream. Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Book Description

Every day, children the world over sing, shout, and celebrate Mother Goose rhymes. And now there's a new reason to cheer: Nina Crews has added her own remarkable, jazzy style of illustration to a collection of forty-one favorite verses. Whether it's Jack jumping over a candlestick (atop a cupcake), Georgie Porgie kissing the girls (at the playground), or a fine lady riding a white horse (on the carousel), this exuberant treasury is sure to be read and enjoyed over and over again.

About the Author
Nina Crews drew inspiration from her Brooklyn neighborhood in creating the artwork for The Neighborhood Mother Goose. Nina's best-selling titles include One Hot Summer Day (Sesame Street Parents "Kid Hits" selection) and Snowball (a CCBC choice). Twice her acclaimed works have been selected as "Best of the Best" books of the year by the Chicago Public Library. Nina Crews grew up in New York City. After graduating from Yale University in 1985, she worked in commercial animation production and contributed illustrations to magazines, including the Village Voice and Parenting. In her own words.... "I look back to move forward on a new children's book. I try to remember a much younger me and recreate some of the things that delighted me then. These pleasures were often quite simple, perhaps the shape or taste of something or the colors that it evoked-and everything was set against a noisy, busy, city backdrop. "I was raised in New York City. I think I've always loved it. There may have been more tall buildings than trees, but I enjoyed the city and all its variety. The people, the neighborhoods, all of the city's quirkiness were endlessly exciting. "I started taking pictures at an early age, and the city was my first subject. I grew up in a family of artists and saw the children's-book business firsthand. My parents, Donald Crews and Ann Jonas, always encouraged my sister and me in all our art projects. I had wellrounded art training in high school but became more focused on photography in college. Since then I have been working in commercial animation production and doing freelance photo-collage illustration. "I love making collages. Some of my favorite artists—Romare Bearden, Hannah Hoch, and Man Ray—combined photography and collage. Collage allows me to use photography playfully and to tell a story on many levels. "I enjoy photographing children. The interaction always adds something to the project; their performances always give me new ideas. I try to keep the photography session as loose as possible. Collaging the images allows me a great deal of freedom. Basically, almost anything can happen. "Writing the text is another kind of challenge. I try to find a good balance between the written story and the visual story. Each one should help the other. Picture books are the combination of two forms of poetry, written and visual, and their flow should be musical. I find myself reading a lot of poetry while I work on ideas. "As a child I loved books and I loved to look. The more there was to see in any one image, the better. I also loved books that were set in city places. I hope that a new generation will get these same pleasures from my books."


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         Book Review

The Neighborhood Mother Goose
- Book Reviews,
by Nina Crews (Illustrator)

The Neighborhood Mother Goose

ANNOTATION

A collection of nursery rhymes, both familiar and lesser known, illustrated with photographs in a city setting.

FROM THE PUBLISHER

A collection of nursery rhymes, both familiar and lesser known, illustrated with photographs in a city setting.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

Crews's photographic picture books (One Hot Summer Day; Snowball) have always captured a certain rhythm-be it of the playground, a city sidewalk or just childlike interaction. Like them, her latest project rolls along with a strong beat; verse and image keep perfect time. Viewed through Crews's camera, an urban neighborhood (the author's beloved Brooklyn, as distinguished by various borough landmarks) resonates with activity. Readers can almost hear hands clapping, babies cooing and children laughing in crisp photo-collages. A grassy park, storefronts, apartment windows and rooftops provide some of the backdrops for members of a multi-ethnic cast as they interpret such rhymes as "Ring Around the Rosie," "Dance, Little Baby" and "Humpty Dumpty." Crews includes lesser-known verses as well-"Cobbler, Cobbler," "Three Wise Men of Gotham"-which work to equally good effect. Adding an element of whimsy, she digitally manipulates her photos, achieving a varied scale that allows Jack (of "Be Nimble" fame) to hurdle a cupcake with a candle in it, or three tiny men (those men of Gotham) to head seaward off a Coney Island pier. The updated look provides a freshness without being overtly contemporary; Mother Goose's timeless rhymes are quite at home in this new setting. Throughout, the artist demonstrates a talent for coaxing seemingly candid moments from her child subjects as they enact their nursery-rhyme roles, and the other hallmarks of her work-color, action and a sense of fun-shine at full force. Ages 3-up. (Jan.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Children's Literature - Joan Kindig, Ph.D.

Just when Mother Goose rhymes seem to have fallen by the wayside, Nina Crews has resurrected them and made them relevant to children today. Through the use of photography and children in an urban setting, she has cast Mother Goose in whole new light. Rhymes like "There Was a Little Girl" and "Jack and Jill" are updated and fresh yet they still retain the integrity of the rhymes themselves. This volume will appeal to children of all shapes, sizes, and colors. Just what Mother Goose was intended to do! 2004, Greenwillow, Ages 4 to 7.

School Library Journal

PreS-Gr 2-No quaint little woman in a tall hat here! This "Mother Goose" is a real goose that lives in a city park. The 41 rhymes range from the most familiar ("Pat-a-cake," "The itsy-bitsy spider") to a few that may be new to readers. Crews sets the verses in an urban environment full of city sidewalks, fire escapes, and brownstones. The pages are peopled with modern-looking, jeans- and T-shirt-clad youngsters of a variety of ages and backgrounds, as well as several adults. It is the smart, digitally manipulated photographic compositions that give this book its snap. They capture a child's real world, animated by contemporary visual references. A saucy little girl with a little curl is busily taking scissors to her Barbie's hair, and a helmeted kid rides a razor scooter in the street. Some pictures have been manipulated to be humorously surreal. The grinning lad photographed in "To market, to market" is carrying a grocery bag with a real piglet in it, while the old woman who lived in a shoe is raising her brood in a pair of well-worn men's boots carelessly tossed on the stairs. This offering is a fresh and welcome contribution that will have broader appeal than the standard nursery rhyme fare, which often seems limited to the preschool set. A truly cool version that is not for babies only.-Kate McClelland, Perrot Memorial Library, Old Greenwich, CT Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Crews connects 41 nursery rhymes to full-spread, skillfully manipulated photo-collages depicting a multi-age cast of marvelously expressive children at play in various sunny, well-kept Brooklyn locales. Her visualizations are, by and large, literal: an outsized dish and spoon peer over a tall fence between brownstones, ignoring the airborne cow in the background; an itsy bitsy spider does double duty, climbing up a drain spout and frightening a brown-skinned Miss Muffet; a thumb-sized little old lady laughingly scolds 15 even tinier children as they clamber over a pair of shoes left on a carpeted stairway. Opening and closing with rooftop views of Brooklyn (look for the goose), this gathering of common and not-so-common rhymes will be a hit with young readers and pre-readers in any setting, urban or otherwise. (source note) (Nursery rhymes. 3-7)


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