As the forest begins to change, the animals and birds, no longer happy there, fly away in Professor Noah's amazing spaceship. Where do they go and what do they find there?
Brian Wildsmith (1930-2016) was raised in a small mining village in Yorkshire, England, where, he says, "Everything was grey. There wasn't any colour. It was all up to my imagination. I had to draw in my head..."
He won a scholarship to the Slade School of Fine Art where he studied for three years. For a while he taught music at the Royal Military School of Music, but then gave it up so that he could paint full time.
He has deservedly earned a reputation as one of the greatest living children's illustrators. In 1962, he published his first children's book, ABC, for which he was awarded the Kate Greenaway Medal, Britain's equivalent to the Caldecott Medal. He was also a runner up for this medal for The Owl and the Woodpecker.
Wildsmith has said: "I believe that beautiful picture books are vitally important in subconsciously forming a child's visual appreciation, which will bear fruit in later life."
In 1994, the Brian Wildsmith Art Museum was established in Izukogen, a town south of Tokyo, Japan. Almost one and a half million people visited a traveling exhibition of his work in 2005. Eight hundred of his paintings are on loan to the museum.
Brian is married, has four children, and currently lives in the south of France.
My rating is for Wildsmith's artwork only, as I hate the idea of this book: destroy one planet, start again on another. In this case, the innocent animals are suffering the effects of man's pollution, so Professor Noah (Let's hope he's a better man than the biblical one.) takes them all on a magic, mystical rocket ride to a pure, uncontaminated planet.
I'm really not sure what kids would think of this one . . .
This book is so fun and creative! It's a retelling of Noah's Ark, but with a spaceship, and the animals taking on a bigger role. My five-year-old loved it. Highly recommended!
Absolutely brilliant and beautiful. An interesting, science-fiction twist on the Noah's Ark Bible story. LOVE the artwork! Brain Wildsmith is a genius. I don't know how in the world I didn't know about his work until very recently. I am quickly making up for lost time by reading everything he ever wrote/illustrated! AMAZING stuff!