Think Big

ThinkBigThink Big (Bloomsbury, 2012), written by Liz Garton Scanlon and illustrated by Vanessa Brantley Newton, champions art and creativity. Selected as a Scholastic Book Club book, the picture book follows a diverse set of students as they knit, draw, bake, sew, play music and perform other activities in anticipation of an upcoming play.

Kirkus calls the book “A bouncy, early-childhood answer to Glee.” As with her other picture books, such as All the World (Beach Lane Books/Simon and Schuster, 2009), Scanlon’s prose is pitch-perfect, striking the right balance of rhyme and word choice. Also, Scanlon’s sparse text allows Newton’s illustrations to shine. Newton mixes a number of mediums into a digital collage; the page layouts pull the reader into the action in a way that complements the lyrical text. My personal favorite touch is a black and white cat that aides in the creativity.

While the book is a celebration of art and creativity, it also prods the reader to “dream big.” Scanlon’s text (No thought/Too great/You Think/We’ll wait) and Newton’s images of the next conductor, reporter, or even tiger (cats have dreams, too) form the perfect marriage of words and images. The book will be having younger and older readers alike striving to “Think Big.”

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