Walter Wick's new book of search-and-find puzzles--each with a brain-teasing twist--is over the top!Walter once again delights our eyes and challenges our minds with his own special wit and style.
With his signature style of photographic artwork, Walter Wick takes picture puzzles to a new level with CAN YOU SEE WHAT I SEE? Twelve tantalizing photographs are filled with fascinating objects, while rhyming text challenges readers with lists of items to seek and find. The text on each spread ends with a twist. Readers must go back and solve brain-teasing puzzles: follow an alphabet maze, identify parts needed to build a robot, discover objects in a mirror image that doesn't quite reflect what's really there! This book will provide hours of fun to puzzle-lovers of all ages!
Walter Wick is an American artist and photographer best known for the elaborate images in two series of picture book activities for young children, I Spy and Can You See What I See?, both published by Scholastic.
This book contains 12 prints with pictures to explore, find hidden objects and puzzles to solve. This is also the first book in this series. The photos are amazing and the time and effort required to lay out the spread and capture the images, let alone the hint rhymes that guide you through finding the required items in the pictures - are impressive. Plus, after you have done the book over and over as children are want to do, you can find your own items and take turns calling out items to find and discover in the picture. The spreads in the book are:
String Game In Bins Card Tricks See-Through Wood Shop Domino Effect Magic Mirror Picture Blocks Assembly Required Bump, Bump, Bump! Alphabet Maze Spare Parts
Going back and reading this first book after encountering some of the others, show that Wick's genius was present from the beginning.
Read the review and with links to other reviews of books by the authors on my blog Book Reviews and More.
This book is filled with image puzzles that challenge the reader's mind to see what is seen by the author. This is one that I would have in my classroom library and would not use for a particular lesson. I think this would be a great book for my students to read quietly when they are done with their work, coming in in the morning to read quietly, or to just read for pleasure on their own time.
This is a great book for travel. There is so much to discover on each page that you could get lost for hours looking at the details. It's also a great book to inspire creativity. Everyday objects are put together in novel ways to create extraordinary ordinary scenes.
This was a hand-me-down from Grace and Tyler. Tommy has loved it since the first day he saw it. He is very good at finding tiny objects in busy scenes.