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Turn-Around, Upside-Down Alphabet Book »

Book cover image of Turn-Around, Upside-Down Alphabet Book by Lisa Campbell Ernst

Authors: Lisa Campbell Ernst, Lisa Campbell Ernst
ISBN-13: 9780689856853, ISBN-10: 0689856857
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing
Date Published: July 2004
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Lisa Campbell Ernst

Lisa Campbell Ernst has written and illustrated many popular children's books, including The Turn-Around, Upside-Down Alphabet Book; Hannah Mae O'Hannigan's Wild West Show; Goldilocks Returns, her own version of "Little Red Riding Hood"; and Stella Louella's Runaway Book. She lives in Kansas City, Missouri, with her husband, Lee, and their two daughters, Elizabeth and Allison.

Book Synopsis

At every turn these letters are full of surprises. Imagine! What other things can you discover hiding in the alphabet?

Publishers Weekly

Many alphabet books transform the 26 letters into people, places or things; Ernst (Stella Louella's Runaway Book), however, gives the idea a new twist-literally-by asking readers to rotate her exuberant book 360 degrees, to view each letter from four different perspectives. Working with cut paper, Ernst sets each blocky, sans serif, capital letter against a square field of fluorescent color; in the black border that frames the letters, the text encourages readers to examine the image from each of four angles (as it wraps around the page): "C pretends to be/ an angel's halo" (as readers turn the book to view the letter, bright yellow on an orange background, positioned so that its curve points up), "macaroni and cheese" (the upside-down "C") and a hoop earring (when it rests on its curve)." Not all the suggestions are compelling-O, for example, resembles a bagel no matter how one looks at it-and some youngsters may need coaxing to notice the conceits that depend on the interplay between the letter shape and its negative space (a lime-green N turned on its side looks like "two tortilla chips headed for guacamole" because the angled lines of the letter create two triangles from the yellow field). But children who are mastering both letter recognition and the mechanics of book-reading should get a kick out of how Ernst rewards them for tweaking the rules. Ages 3-6. (July) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

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