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By David
Wiesner, Author and Illustrator
Juvenile
Fiction, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Nature, Science, Ages 5-8
Clarion
Books
Hardcover,
40 pages, Illustrated
September
2006
$17.00
0618194576
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A bright, science-minded boy goes to the
beach equipped to collect and examine flotsam—anything
floating that has been washed ashore. Bottles, lost toys,
small objects of every description are among his usual finds.
But there’s no way he could have prepared for one particular
discovery: a barnacle-encrusted underwater camera, with its
own secrets to share . . . and to keep.
In each of his amazing picture books,
David Wiesner has revealed the magical possibilities of some
ordinary thing or happening—a frog on a lily pad, a
trip to the Empire State Building, a well-known nursery tale.
This time, a day at the beach is the springboard into a wildly
imaginative exploration of the mysteries of the deep, and
of the qualities that enable us to witness these wonders and
delight in them.
David Wiesner’s interest
in visual storytelling dates back to high school days when
he made silent movies and drew wordless comic books. Born
and raised in Bridgewater, New Jersey, he graduated from the
Rhode Island School of Design with a BFA in Illustration.
While a student, he created a painting nine feet long, which
he now recognizes as the genesis of Free Fall, his
first book of his own authorship, for which he was awarded
a Caldecott Honor Medal in 1989. Tuesday was the 1992 Caldecott
Medal Winner, and in 2002 David won his second Caldecott Medal
for The Three Pigs. Mr. Wiesner and his wife, Kim
Kahang, and their two children live in Philadelphia, where
he devotes full time to illustration and she pursues her career
as a surgeon.
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