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Books with author Albert%20Lorenz

  • The Exceptionally, Extraordinarily Ordinary First Day of School

    Albert Lorenz

    Hardcover (Harry N. Abrams, Aug. 1, 2010)
    On the first day back to school from summer vacation, John is the new kid. When the librarian asks him if the school is any different from his last one, he begins a wildly imaginative story about what it was like. What follows are hilarious scenarios—his old school bus was a safari jeep pulled by wild creatures, the school was a castle, and the lunch menu included worms! His imagination wins him the attention and awe of his librarian and peers, setting the tone for a compelling story about conquering the fears of being a new kid, as well as the first-day jitters that many children experience. Albert Lorenz’s over-the-top illustrations, reminiscent of the work of MAD magazine’s early artists, bring the story to life. Speech bubbles and side panels make reference to and define objects in the art (in the most humorous and irreverent way).
    R
  • Metropolis: Ten Cities, Ten Centuries

    Albert Lorenz

    Hardcover (Harry N. Abrams, Sept. 1, 1996)
    An illustrated study presents the great cities of the past ten centuries in pictures and words, from eleventh-century Jerusalem and twelfth-century Paris to twentieth-century New York. BOMC, QPB, History, & Children's BOMC.
  • House

    Albert Lorenz

    Hardcover (Harry N. Abrams, Sept. 30, 1998)
    In the follow-up to Metropolis, homes from around the world and throughout history are creatively illustrated, from Pontius Pilate's Roman villa and a medieval peasant cottage to a 1930s New York City apartment building and a Russian space station. 15,000 first printing.
    K
  • The Exceptionally, Extraordinarily Ordinary First Day of School

    Albert Lorenz

    Hardcover (Abrams Books for Young Readers, Aug. 1, 2010)
    On the first day back to school from summer vacation, John is the new kid. When the librarian asks him if the school is any different from his last one, he begins a wildly imaginative story about what it was like. What follows are hilarious scenarios—his old school bus was a safari jeep pulled by wild creatures, the school was a castle, and the lunch menu included worms! His imagination wins him the attention and awe of his librarian and peers, setting the tone for a compelling story about conquering the fears of being a new kid, as well as the first-day jitters that many children experience. Albert Lorenz’s over-the-top illustrations, reminiscent of the work of MAD magazine’s early artists, bring the story to life. Speech bubbles and side panels make reference to and define objects in the art (in the most humorous and irreverent way).
    Z+
  • Metropolis Ten Cities Ten Centuries

    Albert Lorenz

    Hardcover (Orion, Nov. 4, 1996)
    In this history, each century is examined through the perspective of a city that helped define the age. Maps drawn from a bird's eye's point of view introduce each chapter, then follows a dramatic historical event which represents the spirit of the age under examination. Forming a two-page border around this main illustration is a selective international chronicle of the century's key historical, cultural, scientific and technological events. Inside the covers of "Metropolis", readers can see 11th-century Jerusalem as the city falls to the Crusader army; the building of Notre Dame cathedral in 12th-century Paris; a Mongol tent city somewhere in 13th-century Europe; 14th-century Koblenz in the grip of the Black Death; 15th-century Lisbon and Mozambique in the Age of Exploration; Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci at work in 16th-century Florence; 17th-century Osaka in the twilight of the Samurai; a concert hall with Mozart and Beethoven in 18th-century Vienna; 19th-century London in the age of Victoria; and downtown New York in the 20th century.
  • Metropolis

    Albert Lorenz

    Hardcover
    None
  • Metropolis: Ten Cities, Ten Centuries by Albert Lorenz

    Albert Lorenz

    Hardcover (Harry N. Abrams, Aug. 16, 1671)
    None