With temperatures soaring, I had my first ice cream cone of the season, a scoop of butter pecan on a sugar cone from Ed’s Real Scoop. Voted the best homemade ice cream in the city, Ed’s was worth the trip across the city. With ice cream in hand, I made my way to the water. [...]
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Blog: B is for Books (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children's book, children's book reviews, Artists I Love, Clarion Books, Hello, My Name is..., Little People: Ages 4 to 8, A+ Authors, Weird and Wonderful, Flotsam, David Wiesner, Thao Lam, Add a tag

Blog: A Fuse #8 Production (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Uncategorized, Flotsam, David Wiesner, Top 100 Picture Books Poll, Add a tag
#77 Flotsam by David Wiesner (2006)
26 points
Most of David Wiesner’s wordless picture books are all wonderful, it is hard to pick one, but I don’t want to list them all and take up spots. This one is more intricate, and a good one to ask kids to write out their version of the story. – Dudee Chiang
There is no finer example of unbridled imagination than Wiesner’s 2006 wordless story about a boy who finds amazing things inside old camera washed up on a beach. As the storyline unfolds, the reader discovers that undersea life may be much more sophisticated (and whimsical) than previously thought. - Travis Jonker
An amazing book that exemplifies the saying “a picture is worth a thousand words.” A great book for sharing with kids. – Michael Oakleaf
Hmmm. What to make of Wiesner. Last time this book clocked in at an impressive #58. Now we sink down to #77. Time has passed and memories fog. Will it continue to slip over the years or will it remain here in the brains of adults and children everywhere? Hard to predict.
At any rate, at long last David Wiesner makes an appearance on today’s list. The three time Caldecott Award winner is going to have to stop making books someday if he doesn’t want to cause a revolt amongst all the other author/illustrators out there. Of course, that would mean not getting any more Wiesner books and we cannot have that, can we?
The description from my review reads: “A scientifically minded young man is closely examining the various critters and crabs he finds washed up along the beach shore when he’s suddenly doused in a wave. When he emerges he’s sitting on the sand with an old-fashioned camera beside him. On its front are the words, ‘Melville underwater camera’. Intrigued, the boy plucks out the film and takes it to a one hour photo store. The pictures he gets back, however, are nothing a person could imagine. Mechanical fish swimming with real ones, hot-air pufferfish, entire civilizations living on the backs of gigantic starfish… and that’s just the tip of the iceberg. The last photo, however, is the most interesting of them all. In it, a girl holds a picture of a boy holding a picture of a boy, holding a picture of a girl, and so on. Our boy gets out his magnifying glass and sees even more pictures of kids holding pictures of kids. And when he gets out his microscope he can see all the way back to the very first picture in the batch ever taken. When last we see of our hero he has taken a picture of himself holding the last photo with the Melville camera. Then he tosses it into the sea, where we see it acting out a couple of adventures until the last picture in the book; A girl on a tropical beach reaches for the camera, half-buried in the sand.”
I have always remembered and been fond of the book trailer that was constructed for Flotsam. Here you can see it. Full discloser, my husband is an acquaintance of the creator (now on staff of that new Tim Allen TV show), being a film student and all. It’s funny but this was one of the first major picture book trailers I ever saw. It’s an interesting experiment in the long-term use of book trailers. With more than 14,000 views, maybe there’s something to them after all . . .
Aw, what the hey. I’m in a video mood. Here then is Mr. Wiesner talking about winning the Caldecott for this book:
Schoo

Blog: Jennifer E. Morris (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Turtle, Flotsam, David Wiesner, Add a tag
I love David Wiesner's children's books. How cool is it that one of them came true - sort of. A sea turtle found a digital camera in a water proof housing and managed to turn the thing on and record himself. He's not a very good cinematographer, in fact, I imagine he was probably trying to eat the camera. But it's still neat. Even neater was that they actually tracked down the owner of the camera, a man who lost it scuba diving in November 1,000 miles away.
I wonder if frogs will start flying next.
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Blog: The National Writing for Children Center (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Picture Books, flotsam, Book Bites for Kids, Tracking Trash, Loree Griffin Burns, Curt Ebbesmeyer, jetsam, ocean motion, Add a tag
Listen to this week’s edition of Book Bites for Kids as author Loree Griffin Burns talks about her new nonfiction book, Tracking Trash - Flotsam, Jetsam, and the Science of Ocean Motion
Tracking Trash follows three extraordinary scientists - Dr. Ebbesmeyer, Dr. Jim Inraham, and Captain Charles Moore - as they comb the seas and shores for clues that lend insight into the depths of the ocean.
Listen as Loree Burns describes her beachcombing adventures that resulted in this extraordinary book:

Blog: Three Men in a Tub (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Caldecott, Flotsam, David Wiesner, Add a tag
You have to read David Wiesner's Flotsam! It is pure storytelling genius! It's small wonder that he won his third Caldecott Award with this book. Just awesome.