Taro Gomi is a resident of Tokyo, Japan, and has illustrated more than 100 books for children.
. . . the prevailing mood is one of continuous celebration.
Publisher's Weekly An elementary story that will reach toddlers and
older preschoolers alike. Booklist
--PARENTS' CHOICEStarred Review
The illustrations are vibrant. The story is simple--a little girl
tells what she has learned from her friend the cat, her friend the
dog, her friend the horse, her friend the gorilla and other friends
both common and unlikely. Children will quickly be pointing out the
whimsical details in the art.
--PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, June, 1990
In this ode to everyday activities and things, a free-spirited girl
hops, jumps and kicks her way across the countryside, paying homage
to her friends along the way. Like a satellite launched into
perpetual motion, the constantly moving child praises--among
others--the rooster who taught her to march, the ant who taught her
to explore the earth and the teachers who taught her to study. In
spare, luminous landscapes, the minute world reveals a special
beauty to those still and attentive enough to behold it. The
activities depicted are alternately lively and quiet, but the
prevailing mood is one of continuous celebration. Gomi's (Bus
Stops; Where's the Fish?) meticulous sense of design and careful
use of brilliantly colored, highly delineated images imbues the
story with a sense of the wonder and delight to be derived from
life's simplest--but bountiful--moments. Ages 2-4.
--BOOKLIST, July 1990
A little girl recites all the pleasurable things she has learned
from her friends. "I learned to jump from my friend the dog. I
learned to climb from my friend the monkey. I learned to run from
my friend the horse." The litany continues, including such
meaningful things as reading and studying and, most importantly,
loving. Gomi's simple watercolors, marked by spare, cutout shapes,
are set against a clean white background. An elemental story that
will reach toddlers and older preschoolers alike.
--FIVE OWLS, September/October 1990
Winner of the Graphic Prize at the 1989 Bologna Children's Book
Fair, Taro Gomi has once more created a perfect blend of art and
text in this simple picture book in which a little girl's animal
friends demonstrate some basic actions learned in life. The little
girl gives credit to a variety of living creatures for exemplifying
things humans are apt to take for granted, from walking to
star-gazing and from singing to smelling the flowers. The young
learner accepts easily the examples provided by her animal friends
and then moves smoothly to learning from books, teachers, and human
friends the more complicated tasks of reading, studying, and
playing together. The straightforward text is rhythmic, and the
graphic collage style is brilliantly colored. Subtle and humorous
details, expressions, actions, and objects encourage careful
rereading.
--PARENTS' CHOICEStarred Review
The illustrations are vibrant. The story is simple--a little girl
tells what she has learned from her friend the cat, her friend the
dog, her friend the horse, her friend the gorilla and other friends
both common and unlikely. Children will quickly be pointing out the
whimsical details in the art.
--PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, June, 1990
In this ode to everyday activities and things, a free-spirited girl
hops, jumps and kicks her way across the countryside, paying homage
to her friends along the way. Like a satellite launched into
perpetual motion, the constantly moving child praises--among
others--the rooster who taught her to march, the ant who taught her
to explore the earth and the teachers who taught her to study. In
spare, luminous landscapes, the minute world reveals a special
beauty to those still and attentive enough to behold it. The
activities depicted are alternately lively and quiet, but the
prevailing mood is one of continuous celebration. Gomi's (Bus
Stops; Where's the Fish?) meticulous sense of design and
careful use of brilliantly colored, highly delineated images imbues
the story with a sense of the wonder and delight to be derived from
life's simplest--but bountiful--moments. Ages 2-4.
--BOOKLIST, July 1990
A little girl recites all the pleasurable things she has learned
from her friends. "I learned to jump from my friend the dog. I
learned to climb from my friend the monkey. I learned to run from
my friend the horse." The litany continues, including such
meaningful things as reading and studying and, most importantly,
loving. Gomi's simple watercolors, marked by spare, cutout shapes,
are set against a clean white background. An elemental story that
will reach toddlers and older preschoolers alike.
--FIVE OWLS, September/October 1990
Winner of the Graphic Prize at the 1989 Bologna Children's Book
Fair, Taro Gomi has once more created a perfect blend of art and
text in this simple picture book in which a little girl's animal
friends demonstrate some basic actions learned in life. The little
girl gives credit to a variety of living creatures for exemplifying
things humans are apt to take for granted, from walking to
star-gazing and from singing to smelling the flowers. The young
learner accepts easily the examples provided by her animal friends
and then moves smoothly to learning from books, teachers, and human
friends the more complicated tasks of reading, studying, and
playing together. The straightforward text is rhythmic, and the
graphic collage style is brilliantly colored. Subtle and humorous
details, expressions, actions, and objects encourage careful
rereading.
...the prevailing mood is one of continuous celebration.
Publisher's Weekly
An elementary story that will reach toddlers and older preschoolers alike. Booklist
In this ode to everyday activities and things, a free-spirited girl hops, jumps and kicks her way across the countryside, paying homage to her friends along the way. Like a satellite launched into perpetual motion, the constantly moving child praises--among others--the rooster who taught her to march, the ant who taught her to explore the earth and the teachers who taught her to study. In spare, luminous landscapes, the minute world reveals a special beauty to those still and attentive enough to behold it. The activities depicted are alternately lively and quiet, but the prevailing mood is one of continuous celebration. Gomi's ( Bus Stops ; Where's the Fish? ) meticulous sense of design and careful use of brilliantly colored, highly delineated images imbues the story with a sense of the wonder and delight to be derived from life's simplest--but bountiful--moments. Ages 2-4. (July)
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