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sign up nowcover image What a Wonderful WorldBUY THIS BOOKWhat a Wonderful World

George David Weiss. Atheneum Books, $18.99 (32pp) ISBN 978-0-689-80087-0

Launching off from the lyrics immortalized by Louis Armstrong, Bryan (The Story of Thunder and Lightning) spins a utopian confection of racial harmony and collaboration. The song extols the pleasures of this ``wonderful world'': ``I hear babies cry, I watch them grow./ They'll learn much more than I'll ever know,/ and I think to myself, `What a wonderful world.'"" Bryan illustrates the lyrics by means of a puppet show performed by a cross-cultural group of children and a smiling black man with a trumpet (presiding adults will have to identify the figure as Armstrong; there's not even an explanatory note in the book). Fittingly, Bryan's gouache and tempera paints are as bright and varied as a rainbow, but even with the lyrics they don't tell a coherent story. Bursting with its upbeat message, this seems like a picture-book cross between ``Up with People'' and ``It's a Small World.'' Ages 4-8. (Mar.)DETAILSshareBUY THIS BOOKcloseDetails

Reviewed on: 02/27/1995

Genre: Children's

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Book Reviews
  • BEAUTIFUL BLACKBIRDBEAUTIFUL BLACKBIRDAshley BryanStoryteller Bryan's (What a Wonderful World) singular voice provides rhythm and sound effects throughout this musical adaptation of a Zambian tale. When gray Continue reading »
  • ALL NIGHT, ALL DAY: A Child's First Book of African-American SpiritualsALL NIGHT, ALL DAY: A Child's First Book of African-American Spirituals Alongside sheet music of 20 spirituals, beginning with "All Night, All Day," and concluding appropriately with "Great Big Stars," Bryan illustrates every pair of songs with a Continue reading »
  • A NEST FULL OF STARSA NEST FULL OF STARSJames BerryJamaican-born poet Berry (When I Dance ) celebrates his Caribbean heritage in this patchy collection of poems about childhood. Loosely organized around such Continue reading »
  • Let It ShineLet It ShineAshley BryanBryan (Beautiful Blackbird ) again proves himself a maestro with scissors (depicted on the endpages) in a series of arresting, kaleidoscopic Continue reading »
  • My AmericaMy AmericaJan Spivey GilchristIn celebration of this country's diverse population comes a title that marries color and copy to create a luminous work of art. Set to Gilchrist's (When the Continue reading »
  • All Things Bright and BeautifulAll Things Bright and BeautifulCecil Frances AlexanderFive-time Coretta Scott King Award–winner Bryan (Let It Shine ) interprets Cecil F. Alexander’s 19th-century hymn with cut-paper art defined by Continue reading »
  • Beat the Story Drum, Pum-PumBeat the Story Drum, Pum-PumAshley BryanFive Nigerian folktales, masterfully retold, are accompanied by vibrant woodcuts. Ages 8-12. Continue reading »
  • Sing to the SunSing to the SunAshley BryanBryan ``artfully blends the traditions of African American culture with those of Western art,'' said PW about his collection of poems, which ``elegantly and powerfully celebrates life.'' All ages. Continue reading »
  • Sun Is So QuietSun Is So QuietNikki GiovanniGiovanni (The Genie in the Jar) and Bryan (What a Morning!) form a fruitful partnership in this ebullient collection of 13 poems. Whatever Giovanni's topic, her poetry builds on an underlying Continue reading »
  • The Night Has Ears: African ProverbsThe Night Has Ears: African ProverbsAshley BryanIn Bryan's (Aneesa Lee and the Weaver's Gift, reviewed below) thoughtful introduction to this eclectic collection of 26 African proverbs from various traditions (Yoruba, Gola, Maasi, etc.), he Continue reading »
  • Salting the Ocean: 100 Poems by Young PoetsSalting the Ocean: 100 Poems by Young PoetsBryan's (Jump Back, Honey) vibrant, imaginative cover art and section openers raise high expectations, but this volume offers rather less than meets the eye. Representing Nye's (What Have You Lost?) Continue reading »
  • What a Morning!: The Christmas Story in Black SpiritualsWhat a Morning!: The Christmas Story in Black SpiritualsJohn LangstaffIn this picture book, the Christmas story is told in spirituals: ""Mary Had a Baby,'' ``My Lord, What a Morning!'' and ``Go Tell It on the Mountain'' among them, until the baby is born, and ``Behold Continue reading »
  • The Story of the Three KingdomsThe Story of the Three KingdomsWalter Dean MyersMyers (Brown Angels) and Bryan (Sing to the Sun) make a dynamite team. Here, the hot colors, sweeping lines and stylized figures that characterize Bryan's art form a bold backdrop for the author's Continue reading »
  • The House with No Door: African Riddle-PoemsThe House with No Door: African Riddle-PoemsBrian SwannLike his earlier Touching the Distance: Native American Riddle-Poems, these original, laconic verses are based on Swann's collection of riddles, but this time they hail from Africa. One of the more Continue reading »
  • Aneesa Lee and the Weaver's GiftAneesa Lee and the Weaver's GiftNikki GrimesIn a series of thoughtful, interlocking poems, Grimes (Meet Danitra Brown) skillfully uses the metaphor of weaving to explore the world of a talented girl. The young weaver's strands of black, white Continue reading »
  • Who Built the Stable? A Nativity PoemWho Built the Stable? A Nativity PoemAshley Bryan“A child built the stable./ A little shepherd boy/ Apprenticed as a carpenter/ In his father’s employ” is Bryan’s (All Things Bright and Beautiful) answer to the title’s question. Told in rhyming Continue reading »
  • Can’t Scare Me!Can’t Scare Me!Ashley BryanIn Bryan’s folktale-style story, a boy is certain he’s above the rules, but he doesn’t suffer the usual comeuppance. Instead, he makes fools out of his enemies and earns his grandmother’s admiration. Continue reading »
  • Ashley Bryan’s Puppets: Making Something From EverythingAshley Bryan’s Puppets: Making Something From EverythingAshley BryanBryan (Can't Scare Me!) shows off another side of his artistry in this enchanting photographic tour of more than 30 puppets he has fashioned out of the flotsam and jetsam he finds on the beach around Continue reading »
  • Sail AwaySail AwayLangston HughesHughes may be best known for his work tied to questions of racial and national identity, yet these 15 collected poems%E2%80%94about the movement of water, the sea, and its travelers%E2%80%94show a Continue reading »
  • Freedom Over MeFreedom Over MeAshley BryanUsing a document from 1828 that lists the value of a U.S. landowner’s 11 slaves, Bryan (Sail Away) creates distinct personalities and voices for each, painting their portraits and imagining Continue reading »
  • I Am LovedI Am LovedNikki GiovanniIn 11 poems, a mix of new and previously published work, Giovanni celebrates open-ended and affirming love. Some invoke love directly (“I wrote a poem/ for you because/ you are/ my little boy,” Continue reading »
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