A six-year-old with a beard and no worries. . .
A narrator who contemplates the repercussions of eating a blue apple. . .
And wonderful verse to make us all think of how we choose to treat our day:
The effort is the same,
you know,
thinking good
as thinking bad,
saying nice
instead of mean,
making happy,
making sad. . .
From the author/illustrator of AN AWESOME BOOK comes this November 2012 release from Candlewick. I got to see the ARC on NetGalley, but I cannot wait to see this in full-color when it releases this fall.
Opportunities to make new friends are as close as the word, "Hello" in Clayton's pieces which many are already comparing to Seuss, Silverstein, and Sendek.
Stores that sell colors found in Clayton's collection are sure to invite conversations in the classroom about looking for the positive.
Xavier Xing Xu is a delightful look at one of my frustrations while collecting alphabet books. . .the treatment of X. It is here that Clayton seems to earn his Silverstein comparisons.
"Try" is sure to be a favorite among teachers and coaches. And it is in a piece like this that Clayton seems to earn his Seuss-ian comparisons:
Today you should ride in a helicopter
today you should tame a whale
today you should race
to outer space
at at least
you should try
and fail.
So many pieces in Clayton's upcoming collection are just ripe for posting in the classroom. "Give Me a Try" finds an elephant who happens upon a rope hanging from the sky. He wonders what will happen if he pulls it and he wonders what will happen if he should just walk on by.
"Make Magic! Do Good!" is the final piece in the collection and it is the just right piece to anchor this collection.
It is my hope that people will pick up upon this collection as much as they have celebrated AN AWESOME BOOK. I think Dallas Clayton is a name to watch in the near future. This guy is going places and inviting readers to come along.