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$29.99

Hardback

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English
Exisle
04 April 2017
The color is blocked! Readers must rub, turn, and tap the pages to straighten out pipes, unplug corks, and keep the color flowing. But watch out--the color might run faster than you can keep up! Along the way, readers will learn primary colors, how mixing colors can make secondary colors, and why you should never, ever, put too much trust in a narrator.

By:  
Illustrated by:   David W. Miles
Imprint:   Exisle
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 234mm,  Spine: 10mm
Weight:   400g
ISBN:   9781944822828
ISBN 10:   1944822828
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   From 3 to 7 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  English as a second language
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Reviews for Color Blocked

Color Blocked is an exciting experience for young children learning their primary colors and also learning more about creating secondary colors through all kinds of fun interactions with books, their best friends. Rainbow colored, elaborate illustrations alternate with intricate black and white drawings drenching and belting single and blended colors. Readers are asked to tip, shake, rub, turn sideways, and shut the book to promote color returning to the pages. Dramatic in its artistic development, Color Blocked is a glorious experiment in color imagining and creating, contrasted with black and white backgrounds drained of color. Color Blocked is wonderful reading for kids age 4-6 and up. -Midwest Book Review Oops! The color factory has malfunctioned, and turtle needs help as he rushes about attempting to put a riotous rainbow explosion back to rights, in Ashley Sorenson's visually delectable Color Blocked. Clean black and white lines of industrial pipes juxtapose brilliant drips, splats, and fusions from illustrator David Miles in this interactive introduction to colors and blending. Small hands are prompted to shake, tap, and twist as each turn of the page reveals another color catastrophe. -Foreword Reviews Pipes get clogged and readers must help.A steampunk-lite factory with curving, outdoor chutes and tubes-the whole thing possibly floating in the sky as its own planet-shoots colors into the air. The scene is brightly colored. On the second spread, the factory morphs into a black-line drawing of itself, not a single bit colored in; no color sprays out. Uh-oh -the color is blocked, and while some readers may wonder how a blockage of new liquid has rendered the whole factory suddenly black-and-white, others will dig into the instructions on helping. Shaking the book unclogs pipes; turning the book all the way around inexplicably straightens out twisted pipes; turning it sideways dumps out excess color. As primaries flow, they become secondaries; paint-y chaos builds until the bespectacled host turtle, overwhelmed, pleads, Shut the boooooooooooook! The color-mixing, paint textures, and splatters are visually fascinating, and the complex pipes are cool, but the paint flow and instructions seem arbitrary, and the illustrations are disjointed. Miles' mixed media on board includes some stock images, and while it's unclear which ones, that's hardly a recommendation. Herve Tullet's Mix It Up (2014) is far more luscious, and Eric Telchin and Diego Funck's Black and White Factory (2016) covers very similar ground, down to animal hosts wearing glasses; both feature reader participation. Not a first choice. (Picture book. 3-6) -Kirkus Reviews


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