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Library Binding Ezra Jack Keats: A Biography with Illustrations Book

ISBN: 1881889653

ISBN13: 9781881889656

Ezra Jack Keats: A Biography with Illustrations

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Format: Library Binding

Condition: Good*

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Book Overview

Each book in the "Family Ties" series explores a particular aspect of how families stay together, play together, learn together, grow together, and resolve conflicts together. The series celebrates... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

1 rating

Much more than a snowy day

Let us all sit back for a moment and pay silent tribute to the great biographies of children's writers out there today. Heck, let's go so far as to name them too. Why there's "Ezra Jack Keats" by Dean Engel and Florence B. Freedman and then there's... um... well.... hm. All right, I'll simplify the request. Let's all sit back for a moment and pay silent tribute to the ONLY great biography of a children's writer out there (written specifically with kid readers in mind). And that would be the aforementioned "Ezra Jack Keats". Seeing it on the New York Public Library's list of 100 Children's Books Everyone Should Know, I felt a twinge guilty that I'd never even heard of the book before. So I was plenty reluctant about reading it. I mean, yes I understand the groundbreaking nature of his "Snowy Day" and I've always had an incredible respect for "Louie", "Goggles", and "Apt. 3", but let's be serious here. How interesting could this book actually be? We're not talking about someone who went out and climbed mountains or fought wild woolly snaggle-toothed wildebeests. We're talking about a simple author/illustrator. "Ezra Jack Keats" was, to my mind, going to be a long hard slog. Instead, it was light, fascinating, sad, and inspiring. Everything, in fact, that a good biography about such a man should be. Born Jack Ezra Katz in 1916, Ezra was fond of drawing right from the get-go. He'd find any abandoned burlap or piece of wood he could get his hands on so that he could draw and paint. His father thought this to be a waste of talent, but Ezra was good. The book identifies those critical moments in Ezra's young life that determined what kind of person he would be. There was the time he ran away from home and ended up getting semi-mugged by the local bullies. The time he had a brief theological conversation with Tzadik, the local reclusive holy man. The time he discovered the library, and the time he made a lifelong friend named Itz. The book also looks at how he eventually grew up and became the children's illustrator he's remembered as today. But mostly this is the formation of an artist as a young man. The incidents within a family and a life that made him who he was. Now the book was written, partly, by Florence Freedman (any relation to Russell, I wonder?) who was Ezra's teacher in high school. But I suspect the real writing credit should fall on Dean Engel herself. In many ways, Engel has extended the average hum-drum children's book into a real work of beauty. Take, for example, this section that discusses Ezra's newfound friendship with his scientifically minded friend Itz. In this section Ezra would teach Itz about colors and artistic expression and Itz would teach Ezra about the science behind the beauty. For example: "He also explained how, before it dies, a lieaf stands upright on its branch for just a moment and then, with no air to support it, flutters to the ground". I've picked out this sentence in the b
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