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Books with author Andrea Wisnewski

  • Little Old Farm Folk

    Andrea Wisnewski

    Board book (David R. Godine, Publisher, May 25, 2017)
    A board book especially for country toddlers. In sweet pictures and rhyme, we are taken through the daily tasks of running the farm: milking, egg collecting, laundry, woodcutting, and more. The little old man, the little old lady, their cat, their dog, and other familiar livestock are depicted in Andrea Wisnewski's uniquely charming paper-cut print style. The words on each page beg to be read aloud, time and time again.
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  • The Ink Garden of Brother Theophane

    C.M. Millen, Andrea Wisnewski

    Hardcover (Charlesbridge, July 1, 2010)
    Winner of the 2011 Lee Bennett Hopkins Poetry Award.In a monastery in the mountains of Mourne during the Middle Ages, one young monk struggled to focus on his task: copying the Bible and other scholarly books with plain brown ink made from wood bark in plain brown books in his plain brown robe at his plain brown desk. Brother Theophane was soon transferred from the scribe’s room and assigned to make the ink that the brothers used. With his natural curiosity, Theophane discovered that inks could be made from other plants besides the wood bark. Berries and leaves produced other beautiful colors. And soon, the books the monks made were illuminated with colors and drawings.C.M. Millen’s charming story of a young monk who defied the discipline of the monastery and found his own way to express the beauty of the world will inspire young readers to explore their own world and find their own voices.Andrea Wisnewski’s illustrations, inspired by the illuminated letters that the medieval monks created in books like the Book of Kells, bring to life the colors and beauty that surrounded Brother Theophane amidst the plain world of the monastery.
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  • A Cottage Garden Alphabet

    Andrea Wisnewski

    Hardcover (David R Godine, Feb. 1, 2003)
    This charming book of hand-colored papercuts is guaranteed to delight gardeners young and old, active and armchair. It is a delicious garden alphabet, a convention as old as the sixteenth century, but one that seems to lend itself especially well to the advantages of high relief, gaily-colored papercuts.In this vivid garden, where A is for Arbor and Z is for Zucchini, artist Wisnewski brings her talents to bear not only on flowers, shrubs, herbs, and fruit, but also on the resident fauna: bees and cats, children, dogs, and rabbits. The result is no static florilegium, but a witty and whimsical beehive of various and charming activity.
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  • Trio: The Tale of a Three-Legged Cat

    Andrea Wisnewski

    Hardcover (David R. Godine, Publisher, Nov. 1, 2017)
    “Writing with tenderness and understated humor, Wisnewski portrays disabilities as a simple fact of life―the obstacles that Trio surmounts are less about physical limitation than about learning how to use his body to get where he wants to be.”―Publishers Weekly One of the Best Children’s Picture Books of the Year―Kirkus Reviews Trio is a kitten who was born with three legs. He lives his life as any other kitten would. He loves to play with the chickens, even climbing into their nesting box and finding his new favorite place. One day as he lounges in the hay, an egg hatches beneath him, and he makes a new best friend. A story children will love―and a natural conversation starter with your child about differences.
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  • Little Red Riding Hood

    Andrea Wisnewski

    Paperback (David R Godine Pub, March 30, 2017)
    A version of the classic story about a little girl, her grandmother, and a not-so-clever wolf, set in nineteenth-century rural New England.
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  • Little Red Riding Hood

    Andrea Wisnewski

    Hardcover (David R Godine, Oct. 1, 2006)
    Andrea Wisnewski makes the story of Little Red Riding Hood fresh and new in this ingeniously designed retelling. She has set her tale in the rural New England of the early nineteenth century, basing her interiors, architecture, and costumes on models found at Old Sturbridge Village, the living-history museum in western Massachusetts. The images, full of lovingly rendered period detail, are done in a medium Wisnewski has made her own: black-and-white prints made from intricate papercut designs (the results look much like woodcuts) that are then hand painted in gloriously vivid watercolor. This is surely to become the favorite American retelling of this classic tale from Grimm, the one about a stout-hearted little girl and the crafty, hungry wolf.
  • LITTLE RED RIDING HOOD

    Andrea (reteller) Wisnewski

    Hardcover (Godine, March 15, 2006)
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