Over the Hills and Far Away: A Treasury of Nursery RhymesFrom Hammill, Elizabeth (COM)
Additionally, we will certainly share you the book Over The Hills And Far Away: A Treasury Of Nursery RhymesFrom Hammill, Elizabeth (COM) in soft documents kinds. It will not interrupt you making heavy of you bag. You require only computer system tool or gizmo. The link that our company offer in this site is available to click then download this Over The Hills And Far Away: A Treasury Of Nursery RhymesFrom Hammill, Elizabeth (COM) You understand, having soft data of a book Over The Hills And Far Away: A Treasury Of Nursery RhymesFrom Hammill, Elizabeth (COM) to be in your gadget can make alleviate the users. So in this manner, be a good visitor currently!
Over the Hills and Far Away: A Treasury of Nursery RhymesFrom Hammill, Elizabeth (COM)
Read and Download Ebook Over the Hills and Far Away: A Treasury of Nursery RhymesFrom Hammill, Elizabeth (COM)
A spectacular treasury of 150 classic nursery rhymes and new discoveries, featuring a star-studded roster of seventy-seven illustrators.Nursery rhymes have entertained and comforted children for centuries. Over the Hills and Far Away is a unique collection of rhymes and verse from across the globe—rhymes from the English-speaking world as well as verse that entered English from Chinese, Latino, African, and other cultures. With illustrations from seventy-seven artists, many celebrated throughout the world, and some just emerging, this volume is truly an adventure in language, image, and imagination. A magnificent gift for little ones hearing these verses for the first time as well as a wonderful book for family sharing across generations.
Over the Hills and Far Away: A Treasury of Nursery RhymesFrom Hammill, Elizabeth (COM)- Amazon Sales Rank: #121644 in Books
- Brand: Hammill, Elizabeth (COM)
- Published on: 2015-03-10
- Released on: 2015-03-10
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 11.07" h x .62" w x 9.71" l, 1.25 pounds
- Binding: Hardcover
- 160 pages
From School Library Journal PreS-Gr 2—Originally published in Great Britain, this collection includes 150 nursery rhymes—many of them familiar—from 23 countries and cultures, accompanied by color illustrations created by 76 artists, many well known, in a wide variety of styles and mediums: photos, soft watercolor scenes, hand-colored prints, comic strips and cartoons, collage, realistic paintings, and more. Several pages of rhymes are handwritten—some in childlike printing or cursive, others in flowing calligraphy. Jump rope rhymes, riddle rhymes, counting and clapping rhymes, finger games, songs, lullabies, and nonsense rhymes are included. In her two-page introduction, collector Hammill refers to nursery rhymes as "tiny masterpieces of verse" that "have outlasted their origins as street cries, folk songs, political satire, remnants of custom and proverb and have been polished into perfect form over time." Although all of the poems are in English, regional spelling has been used in some poems, such as the Jamaican verse, "Dis lickle pig go a markit,/Dis lickle pig tan a yaad." Appended are an "Index of First Lines," some brief information about each of the artists, and a listing of sources. Four "Contents" pages list poems and artists in order of appearance. The English versions of many familiar poems differ somewhat from the American wording. VERDICT This artistically appealing compilation will delight both children and adults and might be useful in elementary writing projects.—Susan Scheps, formerly at Shaker Public Library, OH
Review A sumptuous multicultural collection of nursery rhymes includes art by over 70 illustrators.The diversity of illustration styles and subjects coincides nicely with the diversity of rhymes, which refreshingly move beyond Anglophone origins. Hammill's skills as collector are especially sharp in juxtaposing cultural variants of rhymes... Delightful. ... Never mind far away, keep this collection close by.—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)The careful juxtaposition of the rhymes highlights both their diversity and cross-cultural commonalities: versions of "Little Miss Muffet" from England, America, Australia, and Jamaica have the girl being frightened by a spider, grasshopper, wombat, and "bredda Anancy." A rich and wonderfully varied addition to the bookshelf of nursery-rhyme collections.—Publishers Weekly (starred review)This artistically appealing compilation will delight both children and adults.—School Library JournalHammill has clearly created the very first nursery rhyme collection of note for the 21st century.... If you own only one nursery rhyme collection on your shelves, own this one.—A Fuse #8 Production (blog)This bountiful collection of colorfully illustrated nursery rhymes showcases both the verse and artists.—BooklistImporting verses from all over the world and from a wide variety of cultures enhanced by beautifully illustrated pages by over 70 celebrated artists, this handsome anthology provides a diverse collection of poems that is a visual and literary delight.—Literacy Daily
About the Author Elizabeth Hammill has been fascinated with what Iona Opie calls the "international exchange and flow" of rhymes and verse for young children. Now, with Over the Hills and Far Away, she is able to present a wide-ranging nursery-rhyme collection that reflects these diverse voices and places them alongside traditional favorites. Originally from the United States, Elizabeth Hammill now lives in England.
Where to Download Over the Hills and Far Away: A Treasury of Nursery RhymesFrom Hammill, Elizabeth (COM)
Most helpful customer reviews
13 of 14 people found the following review helpful. A nursery rhyme book for the 21st century By E. R. Bird Not all nursery rhyme collections are created equal. That is something you discover when you have small children. A parent, even a children’s librarian type parent, will inevitably come to a shocking realization sometime during their child’s early years that when you read a nursery rhyme, the kiddo really and truly seems to love it. Nursery rhymes, far from simply being “good for the child” in some lofty, educated manner, have stuck around as long as they have because they really and truly do speak to the kids. The cadences and rhythms and images are incomparable, and that is regardless of nation or heritage. So as you seek out new nursery rhyme books, you begin to fancy yourself a kind of connoisseur. Some authors provide the classics in an effective manner (Lobel, de Paola, etc.) while others seem to be finding their footing. And really, how many ways can you re-imagine Little Boy Blue anyway? One thing you don’t find in a lot of nursery rhyme collections? Diversity. You pick up something like Over the Hills and Far Away and you see that “more than 70 celebrated artists” are included. It ain’t lying. It also ain’t the white white world we’re so used to in nursery rhyme collections. Tsimshian and Creole, Jamaican and Australian, Chinese American and Chippewa, this is a book that not only speaks to a wider audience than nursery rhyme collections of the past, it’s cleverly constructed and perfectly illustrated to boot. Hammill has clearly created the very first nursery rhyme collection of note for the 21st century.Read the publication page of the book and you will be told that "Over the Hills and Far Away gathers poems from various parts of the English-speaking world, including Great Britain, the Caribbean, Australia, and the United States. Regional spellings and usage have been retained in order to preserve the integrity of the originals.” Fair enough, and I understand why this statement reads the way it does, but it does run the risk of leading the casual reader to believe that this book only collects poems from the English-speakers of the world. Happily, even the most cursory flip through will relieve you of that mistake (to say nothing of reading the Introduction). Because if there is one thing the nursery rhyme books of your average library lack, it is diversity. Generally speaking, if a person wants to find Inuit, Jamaican, Latino, or South African nursery rhymes, you find separate collections of them and that’s that. Almost never do you find them integrated seamlessly with English and American rhymes. Hammill notes in her Introduction that “Nowhere... have I found a wide-ranging collection that sits alongside these Mother Goose favorites and injects fresh life into them – providing a genuine intercultural experience.” Why? Research. Dedication. It takes a single-minded intensity to not only track them down but to also pair each and every one with just the right artist.And the artists, in this particular case, are jaw-dropping. It isn’t just the number of well known names on display. Certainly Mo Willems, Shaun Tan, Lucy Cousins, Ed Young, Jon Klassen, Shirley Hughes, Jerry Pinkney and so on and such are impressive right from the get go. It’s also the fact that there are a great number of artists working here who are not, first and foremost, famous names. Hammill says in her opening that these artists included both the established and the emerging, as well as winner of an Illustration Competition for U.K. art students.And how do these illustrators do? I was pleased. Every collection out there is going to have its stronger and weaker elements. So there were some artists who had clearly put a lot of time and thought into their art, while others seemed to phone it in. The Marcia Williams take on “Old Mother Hubbard” reminded me of the poem in Nursery Rhyme Comics which also turned the rhyme into sequential comic art (it really lends itself to the form well). Meanwhile Eric Carle’s art is just a series of animals taken from his previously published books. Jerry Pinkney created original art of a familiar character when he referenced his Caldecott Honor title Noah’s Ark in the rhyme “Who Built the Ark?” Sometimes the artists alleviate potential creepiness (as with Gus Gordon’s rather charming if carnivorous “Algy Saw a Bear”) while others add to it (I’m thinking of the uber-sketchy men peering at the cheerful girl eating her food alongside the rhymes “Brow Bender”, “Earkin-Hearkin”, and “Knock at the Door”). But by some great good fortune, the bulk of the work is very strong, charming, and actually honestly interesting to kids. Let’s not forget that little factor.I was charmed by the art. I was taken with the selection. But the real reason Hammill’s work on this book blew me away as much as it did? It’s simple. The woman has a gift for pairing complimentary rhymes together. As the mother of a 3-year-old and a new baby I’ve done my due diligence and read every nursery rhyme book I could get my hands on. Yet while artists like Tomie dePaola and Arnold Lobel would pair similar rhymes together in clever ways (rain poems on one page, love poems on another), Hammill sort of kicks everything up to another level. First there are the pairings that are so obvious you’re shocked you haven’t seen them before. “Yankee Doodle” next to “The Grand Old Duke of York”. Or glutinous “Hannah Bantry” with “Jack Sprat” and wife. In her introduction, Hammill notes that in her research she “came upon anthologies of parallel rhymes and verse that have entered and enhanced the English lexicon from Asia, the Caribbean, and African, Native-American, and Hispanic cultures and elsewhere.” It reminds me of that old collection of world fairy and folktales World Tales collected by Idries Shah, which noted similarities in single stories throughout different cultures. Here you’ll see how well some poems pair. Some pairs are the lighthearted kind mentioned above. Others have quite a bit more to say, as when “Hush-a-bye, Baby” sits alongside the Chippewa “Little Baby, Sleep” and artist Olivia Lomenech Gill crafts a fascinating construct of “baby” King George falling off the tree while, on the other page, a Chippewa mother holds her child’s cradle board.In the back of the book you will find a list of sources used to find some of these poems and rhymes. This is followed by a section thanking directly some of the people who helped to find these rhymes, like Pascale Arpin, coordinator of Arts Programming at Nunavut Arts and Crafts Association and Ashley Bryan who opened “his extensive personal library to me and introducing me to important collections of African and Caribbean verse and rhyme”. Many of the collections sourced are older, from the 1929 rhymes from the Bureau of American Ethnology to the 1900 Chinese Mother Goose Rhymes. I’m no nursery rhyme historian so I take it on faith that Hammill took steps to ensure accuracy where the poems are concerned. You need a certain level of trust in these cases. I leave it to others to ascertain one source’s authenticity over another’s.Gone are the days when the publishing industry could put out nursery rhyme collection after nursery rhyme collection and not have to think about the diverse audience who might be reading the poems. Generally when nursery rhymes are produced these days the hat tip made to cultural diversity rests squarely on the shoulders of the illustrator, not the selection of poems themselves. What sets Over the Hills and Far Away apart is the fact that not only has Elizabeth Hammill found a wide range of interesting and intelligent rhymes, she has found ways to interweave them with similar rhymes from other cultures to create a real understanding of why rhymes from children are universally desired and important. For all that we talk about diverse books for kids, I’ve never heard anyone suggest that someone create a book like this before. Now it is here. If you own only one nursery rhyme collection on your shelves, own this one.For all ages.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. The Most beautiful book of Nursery Rhymes ever By MRR There are lots and lots of Nusery Rhyme books to choose from.. Some are old standards, some are jokey and cartooney and then there is this one. The rhymes were chosen with care, and juxtaposed creatively. The artists are some of the best known illustrators of children's books, like Eric Carle, and Shirley Hughes, and others are emerging talents like the sparkling Yasmeen Ismail.(GoTo Bed Fred!)The beautiful cover art by Pamela Zagarenski is dreamily gorgeous. Many of the illustrations are delightfully humorous. There are well known rhymes from Britain and America, as well as rhymes from African American , Native American and the First people of Australia and New Zealand. Parents and grandparents will love reading this to children, and slightly older children will ,I imagine ,page endlessly through these wonderful pages, loving the pictures and memorizing the rhymes. I can't imagine any collection of Children's books being without this volume now that it is here. I only wish for a companion recording to go with the book. Now that would be complete perfection.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. A nice book of nursery rhymes with many world-renowned illustrators By Stuart Dunn Over the Hills and Far Away is a collection or treasury of 150 nursery rhymes from around the world. Including the geographic diversity of these familiar and unfamiliar nursery rhymes, what sets this book apart is the illustrations. Instead of having one illustrator, there are 77 world famous illustrators including Alan Lee, Eric Carle, Marcia Williams. This is a cute book with a lot of rhymes I recognized and a smattering of ones I didn't recognize. My son loves this book, and the sing-songy way the words flow. The illustrations also provide color and character for the visual learner. I confess that I didn't love all of the illustrations, but it was fascinating to flip through the book and see all the different illustration styles of the various artists. Overall, it was a clever book and one worth investing in if you have little ones in the house!
See all 17 customer reviews... Over the Hills and Far Away: A Treasury of Nursery RhymesFrom Hammill, Elizabeth (COM)Over the Hills and Far Away: A Treasury of Nursery RhymesFrom Hammill, Elizabeth (COM) PDF
Over the Hills and Far Away: A Treasury of Nursery RhymesFrom Hammill, Elizabeth (COM) iBooks
Over the Hills and Far Away: A Treasury of Nursery RhymesFrom Hammill, Elizabeth (COM) ePub
Over the Hills and Far Away: A Treasury of Nursery RhymesFrom Hammill, Elizabeth (COM) rtf
Over the Hills and Far Away: A Treasury of Nursery RhymesFrom Hammill, Elizabeth (COM) AZW
Over the Hills and Far Away: A Treasury of Nursery RhymesFrom Hammill, Elizabeth (COM) Kindle
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar