Stormy Night
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Product Description
As a storm rages outside the window, a young girl lies awake at night, her head buzzing with questions: Who am I? Where did we come from? What happens when you die? No answers are provided in Stormy Night. Rather, the questions prompt readers to explore their own place in the world. Winner of the prestigious Bologna Ragazzi Award, this intriguing book provides parents and educators with a springboard for discussions on life's questions. With imaginative drawings and simple but thought-provoking text, Stormy Night is the perfect place for children, regardless of age, cultural background or religion, to start looking for their own answers to all the really important questions.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #224923 in Books
- Published on: 1999-09-01
- Original language: English
- Dimensions: 1.04" h x 8.66" w x 5.81" l, 1.21 pounds
- Binding: Hardcover
- 240 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.ca
Michele Lemieux's beautifully illustrated Stormy Night presents a litany of key existential questions asked by an unnamed girl who lies awake at night, fretting and listening to a storm. Translated to English from German (it was originally published as Gewitternacht, and won the Bologna Ragazzi Award in its first incarnation), some of the Quebec-born author/illustrator's text is quite intense, dealing with topics like death, fear, and uncertainty. On three successive spreads Lemieux writes: "I'm scared of being abandoned," "of being separated from everyone I love," "of being left all alone in the world!" Lemieux balances the text with her witty line drawings--a slice of cake being removed from a decorated whole denotes separation anxiety--making it a useful tool in opening the door to discuss some difficult but unavoidable topics. Weighty issues or not, the book ends on an up note: "And what if we could live forever... and I would have friends everywhere! Wouldn't that be great!" It's also a gorgeous object. (Ages 9 and older) --Deirdre Hanna
Books in Canada
Who am I? Is there only one of me in the world? Will I be a hero some day? Is my whole life mapped out in advance? Or will I have to find my way all by myself? Sometimes I feel like I don't fit in my body! Imagine if we could switch bodies... or at least hide the parts we don't like! Who decided what the first human being would look like? What if we grew out of the ground like vegetables... or if we were manufactured... or made from recycled parts?
These are just some of the questions asked in Michele Lemieux's insightful new book for young readers, Stormy Night. First published in 1996 in Germany, Stormy Night has been translated into nine languages and it won the prestigious 1997 Bologna Ragazzi Award. Lemieux's previous books include a selection of the poems of Edward Lear, There Was an Old Man, and picture book versions of Peter and the Wolf, Amahl and the Night Visitors, and the David Booth anthology, Voices on the Wind: Poems for All Seasons, which won an IODE Book Award.
On a stormy night, a young girl lies in bed awake, thinking aloud, asking herself, or her dog, Fido, questions, seeking answers. She might get out of bed and look out the window at the dark clouds or curl up under the covers, keeping the thunder and lightning at bay. The book is filled with thoughts, ideas, feelings, desires, questions, hopes, wishes.
What makes Stormy Night such a unique book is the combination of a profoundly simple but evocative text with stunningly realized black and white line drawings. Reminiscent of the work of artists like Edward Gorey, William Steig, M.B. Goffstein, and Shel Silverstein, Lemieux has filled Stormy Night with images and ideas that are at once playful and profound. She has a wonderful sense of the macabre. Imagining being able to switch bodies, our heroine envisions a skeleton standing in front of a closet filled with "body" suits with a selection of heads available on a nearby bureau. Pondering what happens after we die, she asks herself if death simply erases our memories, while we watch someone vacuuming up the memories out of a hinge-opened head. A sneaky devil prepares to roll up the world like a scroll after the world ends, and manufactured bodies roll out on an assembly line. But the book is also filled with images that will make readers chuckle and giggle with sheer delight. A teeny-tiny, white-bearded God peers down a hole into a universe filled with stars and planets. Human beings grow out of the ground like vegetables.
Lemieux has said of Stormy Night, "I wanted to create a book that invites one to talk about oneself, a book that opens the way for discussion. I never intended to give any answers, nor did I want to frighten, comfort or make certain topics harmless. I wanted to talk of life, fate, dreams, anxiety and even death, for death is a part of life. I did this by using everyday words, by sketching certain scenes which the words triggered in me. Each question opens a universe of pictures and metaphors, which are already a part of the answer."
There is a rich world to discover in the pages of this provocative picture book. While some picture books are suited to just one audience, others, like Stormy Night, can touch readers of all ages, travelling effortlessly beyond borders. The book's publishing history speaks to its ability to cross boundaries, both physical and cultural. It's a winner, no matter which way you look at like. And it's 100% Canadian, too! Jeffrey Canton(Books in Canada)
From Publishers Weekly
Lightning bolts and existential dilemmas keep a girl awake in this unusual volume, which resembles a compact, thick sketchbook filled with line drawings. The tidy, surreal imagery is strictly black-on-white and recalls the likes of Dali and De Chirico as often as the looser, more accessible line of de Saint-Exup?ry. Brief sentences ("Is there only one of me in the world?") accompany minimalist pictures of the speaker sitting in bed or exchanging concerned glances with her dog, providing launching points for a series of thematic questions ("Sometimes I feel like I don't fit in my body!/ Imagine if we could switch bodies..."). Figures from the girl's imagination convey uncertainty laced with dry humor. A face appears in the center of a labyrinth alongside a plaintive "Sometimes I feel completely lost!" Wordless spreads dramatize the silences between epiphanies. Sometimes, extravagantly blank white pages bring the shock of utter emptiness, while contrasting ink-wash spreads show the girl's small house in a rainy landscape of gray hills and wind-lashed poplar trees. The storm and the anxieties last all night ("Will I know when it's time to die? Will it hurt?"), but with sunrise comes optimism. Lemieux's (What's That Noise?) evocative images and statements work singly, but together they bear cumulative weight and offer reassurance that such questions are universal. Ages 8-up. (Oct.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
