A Rock Can Be..

Author:   Laurie Salas ,  Violeta Dabija
Publisher:   Lerner Publishing Group
ISBN:  

9781467721103


Pages:   32
Publication Date:   01 March 2015
Recommended Age:   From 7 to 8 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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A Rock Can Be..


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Overview

Rocks may seem like boring objects—until you discover that rocks can spark a fire and glow in the dark. Through rhyming text and glowing illustrations, discover how rocks decorate and strengthen the world around them.

Full Product Details

Author:   Laurie Salas ,  Violeta Dabija
Publisher:   Lerner Publishing Group
Imprint:   Lerner Publishing Group
Dimensions:   Width: 10.80cm , Height: 0.70cm , Length: 17.80cm
Weight:   0.399kg
ISBN:  

9781467721103


ISBN 10:   1467721107
Pages:   32
Publication Date:   01 March 2015
Recommended Age:   From 7 to 8 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  Children / Juvenile
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

'A rock is a rock, ' but it can be so much more. A series of short rhyming couplets and digitally collaged illustrations celebrates the idea of rocks. Following the pattern of earlier titles on leaves and water, Salas and Dabija explore the many natural forms in which rock can be found--from the crust of the Earth to the moon's surface, from sand dunes and molten lava to cliffs filled with birds and fossilized bones--and demonstrate many of its uses. There's the play of skipping stones, the art of gargoyles, the utility of a bridge or breakwater, and the practicality of sparking fires and propping up books in a case. The author's two-word images ('Food grinder / Path winder') are each set on a single page and clearly illustrated in spreads that connect ideas that are sometimes quite disparate through color echoes and occasional repeated details. There is a hint of seasonal organization, and the book ends with the harvest and wintry snow. The backmatter provides further explanation for these 22 images, including, for example, instructions for hopscotch and the origin of diamonds. The economy of language and breadth of imagination suggests a broad audience for this wide-ranging and inventive exploration. --Kirkus Reviews -- Journal (12/15/2014 12:00:00 AM) As they did in A Leaf Can Be...(2012) and Water Can Be... (2014), Salas and Dabija have teamed up for this third imaginative creation. Simple rhymes and verses relate various aspects of a rock, explaining how it can be used as 'a hopscotch marker' or as a 'fire sparker.' Listeners meanwhile absorb delicious synonyms and adjectives for a rock that they may have originally thought of as an ordinary object. To help augment their imaginations and knowledge, there are appended pages where children can find a glossary, as well as learn additional facts, such as how rocks can be used to create harbors or how chickens swallow pebbles to help digest their food. Dabija uses traditional as well as digital techniques to illustrate with a bright, colorful palette that is appealing to children. Purchase for your rock hounds or where the earlier books in this series are popular. --School Library Journal -- Journal (1/1/2015 12:00:00 AM) What can a rock be? 'Tall mountain / Park fountain / Dinosaur bone / Stepping-stone.' The ideas expressed in this picture book's pithy text are varied and wide-ranging. Each two-word phrase appears on its own page, accompanied by a luminous illustration. While some concepts will be obvious to children from the words alone, and others are made clear by the pictures, a few ('Fire sparker, ' 'Crusty dome, ' 'Food grinder') may need further explanation. The sometimes cryptic phrases create a natural guessing game, and an appended section offers a paragraph of text explaining each one. Moldovan illustrator Dabija contributes a series of dynamic full-page and double-page images created with traditional and digital media. Her compositions, color combinations, and use of light are particularly fine. Similar in concept to Salas and Dabija's previous picture books, A Leaf Can Be . . . (2012) and Water Can Be . . . (2014), this beautiful picture book makes an excellent classroom read-aloud, challenging children to puzzle out the ideas in the poetic phrases and to broaden their thinking about rocks. --Booklist -- Journal (1/1/2015 12:00:00 AM)


'A rock is a rock, ' but it can be so much more. A series of short rhyming couplets and digitally collaged illustrations celebrates the idea of rocks. Following the pattern of earlier titles on leaves and water, Salas and Dabija explore the many natural forms in which rock can be found--from the crust of the Earth to the moon's surface, from sand dunes and molten lava to cliffs filled with birds and fossilized bones--and demonstrate many of its uses. There's the play of skipping stones, the art of gargoyles, the utility of a bridge or breakwater, and the practicality of sparking fires and propping up books in a case. The author's two-word images ('Food grinder / Path winder') are each set on a single page and clearly illustrated in spreads that connect ideas that are sometimes quite disparate through color echoes and occasional repeated details. There is a hint of seasonal organization, and the book ends with the harvest and wintry snow. The backmatter provides further explanation for these 22 images, including, for example, instructions for hopscotch and the origin of diamonds. The economy of language and breadth of imagination suggests a broad audience for this wide-ranging and inventive exploration. --Kirkus Reviews --Journal What can a rock be? 'Tall mountain / Park fountain / Dinosaur bone / Stepping-stone.' The ideas expressed in this picture book's pithy text are varied and wide-ranging. Each two-word phrase appears on its own page, accompanied by a luminous illustration. While some concepts will be obvious to children from the words alone, and others are made clear by the pictures, a few ('Fire sparker, ' 'Crusty dome, ' 'Food grinder') may need further explanation. The sometimes cryptic phrases create a natural guessing game, and an appended section offers a paragraph of text explaining each one. Moldovan illustrator Dabija contributes a series of dynamic full-page and double-page images created with traditional and digital media. Her compositions, color combinations, and use of light are particularly fine. Similar in concept to Salas and Dabija's previous picture books, A Leaf Can Be . . . (2012) and Water Can Be . . . (2014), this beautiful picture book makes an excellent classroom read-aloud, challenging children to puzzle out the ideas in the poetic phrases and to broaden their thinking about rocks. --Booklist --Journal As they did in A Leaf Can Be...(2012) and Water Can Be... (2014), Salas and Dabija have teamed up for this third imaginative creation. Simple rhymes and verses relate various aspects of a rock, explaining how it can be used as 'a hopscotch marker' or as a 'fire sparker.' Listeners meanwhile absorb delicious synonyms and adjectives for a rock that they may have originally thought of as an ordinary object. To help augment their imaginations and knowledge, there are appended pages where children can find a glossary, as well as learn additional facts, such as how rocks can be used to create harbors or how chickens swallow pebbles to help digest their food. Dabija uses traditional as well as digital techniques to illustrate with a bright, colorful palette that is appealing to children. Purchase for your rock hounds or where the earlier books in this series are popular. --School Library Journal --Journal


...this beautiful picture book makes an excellent classroom read-aloud, challenging children to puzzle out the ideas in the poetic phrases and to broaden their thinking about rocks. --Booklist -- (1/1/2015 12:00:00 AM) Purchase for your rock hounds or where the earlier books in this series are popular. --School Library Journal -- (1/1/2015 12:00:00 AM) The economy of language and breadth of imagination suggests a broad audience for this wide-ranging and inventive exploration. --Kirkus Reviews -- (12/15/2014 12:00:00 AM)


'A rock is a rock, ' but it can be so much more. A series of short rhyming couplets and digitally collaged illustrations celebrates the idea of rocks. Following the pattern of earlier titles on leaves and water, Salas and Dabija explore the many natural forms in which rock can be found--from the crust of the Earth to the moon's surface, from sand dunes and molten lava to cliffs filled with birds and fossilized bones--and demonstrate many of its uses. There's the play of skipping stones, the art of gargoyles, the utility of a bridge or breakwater, and the practicality of sparking fires and propping up books in a case. The author's two-word images ('Food grinder / Path winder') are each set on a single page and clearly illustrated in spreads that connect ideas that are sometimes quite disparate through color echoes and occasional repeated details. There is a hint of seasonal organization, and the book ends with the harvest and wintry snow. The backmatter provides further explanation for these 22 images, including, for example, instructions for hopscotch and the origin of diamonds. The economy of language and breadth of imagination suggests a broad audience for this wide-ranging and inventive exploration. --Kirkus Reviews -- (12/15/2014 12:00:00 AM) As they did in A Leaf Can Be...(2012) and Water Can Be... (2014), Salas and Dabija have teamed up for this third imaginative creation. Simple rhymes and verses relate various aspects of a rock, explaining how it can be used as 'a hopscotch marker' or as a 'fire sparker.' Listeners meanwhile absorb delicious synonyms and adjectives for a rock that they may have originally thought of as an ordinary object. To help augment their imaginations and knowledge, there are appended pages where children can find a glossary, as well as learn additional facts, such as how rocks can be used to create harbors or how chickens swallow pebbles to help digest their food. Dabija uses traditional as well as digital techniques to illustrate with a bright, colorful palette that is appealing to children. Purchase for your rock hounds or where the earlier books in this series are popular. --School Library Journal -- (1/1/2015 12:00:00 AM) What can a rock be? 'Tall mountain / Park fountain / Dinosaur bone / Stepping-stone.' The ideas expressed in this picture book's pithy text are varied and wide-ranging. Each two-word phrase appears on its own page, accompanied by a luminous illustration. While some concepts will be obvious to children from the words alone, and others are made clear by the pictures, a few ('Fire sparker, ' 'Crusty dome, ' 'Food grinder') may need further explanation. The sometimes cryptic phrases create a natural guessing game, and an appended section offers a paragraph of text explaining each one. Moldovan illustrator Dabija contributes a series of dynamic full-page and double-page images created with traditional and digital media. Her compositions, color combinations, and use of light are particularly fine. Similar in concept to Salas and Dabija's previous picture books, A Leaf Can Be . . . (2012) and Water Can Be . . . (2014), this beautiful picture book makes an excellent classroom read-aloud, challenging children to puzzle out the ideas in the poetic phrases and to broaden their thinking about rocks. --Booklist -- (1/1/2015 12:00:00 AM)


Author Information

Laura Purdie Salas is the author of more than 135 books for kids, including If You Were the Moon, Lion of the Sky, theCan Be... series, and Bookspeak! Poems about Books. Poetry and rhyming nonfiction books are her favorite things to write. Laura loves to do author visits, writing workshops, and teacher inservices. Read more about Laura and her work at laurasalas.com. Violeta Dabija lives in Moldova, a small Eastern European country. She has a strong traditional art background, a BA degree in Fine Arts/Graphic Design and 10 years of experience as a children's book illustrator. She works in both traditional and digital media and often mixes them to produce delicate and atmospheric illustrations with a traditional feel. She has illustrated about 25 children's books and she enjoys creating magic pictures and unique environments for her characters.

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