Showing posts with label Elisha Cooper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elisha Cooper. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

All Aboard!

The memory of riding a train for the first time is like riding a two-wheeler bike for the first time; it's memorable, not to be forgotten.  I'm not talking about the miniature versions at county fairs or festivals which as a child you thought were grander than grand or even the larger models for tourists at parks.  No, I'm talking about those trains which as an adult are so large you feel dwarfed by their size and power.

I, for one, have been fascinated by trains as far back as I can remember.  My train set was never a toy but represented the magic of transportation, the marvel and promise of new sights to see, new people to meet.  To this day it is my favorite way to get from one place to another.  Elisha Cooper has written and illustrated a new title, Train (Orchard Books, an imprint of Scholastic Inc.), which captures the magic, marvel and promise of trains.

The train leaves in minutes.  Passengers buy tickets and rush across to where the train is humming on its tracks.  Conductors look up the platform.  They check their watches.

With those four sentences we readers find ourselves in that very station.  We are among the waiting passengers or perhaps, we are the one who runs to get on the train as it leaves.  Journeying from one town to the next, watching the sights of one city blend into those of another, we are heading toward a daily destination on a Commuter Train.  When it makes a stop, pausing, another engine and cars whiz by us.

Journeying longer distances find travelers seated on a Passenger Train. An engineer works the controls as we shift and sway in our seats.  Different sounds are heard as the cars go by a railroad crossing.  Our senses detect the shift as the train enters the station.  Here the people bear the trappings of suitcases and bags, intending to stay wherever they might be going.

Unbeknownst to them in the rail yard another train is getting ready to make a delivery, a Freight Train. Car after car loaded with food and goods essential to the lives of people are hooked to the engine.  Many times the number of cars makes it necessary for more than one engine to pull.  Do you remember as a child (and even as an adult) counting the cars on freight trains as they pass through town, moving so slowly because of their load?

Winding it's way across one state into the next, the Freight Train is passed by another. People enjoy meals in the dining car and get cozy in the sleeping car, dreaming as the Overnight Train speeds on through the moonlit night.   As the new day dawns, the High-Speed Train streaks by toward the city, as the eager passengers reach the end of their trip.


While it's not easy, I read Train several times focusing on the text alone.  Elisha Cooper states in the Author's Note at the book's end, he rode many trains in preparation for writing and illustrating this book.  He describes the experience with splendid accuracy, noting what one might hear, smell and see with exemplary word choices and pacing.  His depiction of the train at the railroad crossing is perfect...yes...perfect.  Even if you've never been on a train he conveys it so well, you will feel as if you've recently taken a trip.  Here are a couple of examples of sensory passages.

The train clatters past ball fields and bridges, past backyards and ponds. Main streets flash by.  The view changes very second.

The Passenger Train crawls over the tracks through a jungle of gravel, wires, and dirt.  Everything smells of grease and rust and burnt toast.


When the watercolor and pencil artwork used in the illustrations is paired with the text, Elisha Cooper's book, Train elevates to masterful.  The open jacket, two pages including the flaps, features all of the trains on tracks near or next to one another with glimpses of the countryside and cityscapes along the right and left edges.  The color palette used here is continued throughout the book with the emphasis on earth tones.  The dusty, red solid cover provides the background for a cream-colored outline diagram of Engine 212.  Looking like sky, the blue opening endpapers show a single white train track, the closing endpapers a beautiful blend of tracks flowing into one another against the same blue.

The three pages which frame the narrative at the beginning with the two title pages and the page opposite the publication information at the back are patterned with Elisha Cooper's people.  All kinds of people are pictured; young to old, from all walks of life, in a train station.  His ability to convey so much with a single brush stroke takes my breath away.

Within the body of the book, some of his double page illustrations will highlight people or animals in a large white space along the bottom edge; railroad personnel, flying herons.  Or as in the case of the Commuter Train he visualizes the train at the top of two pages while highlighting the inside filled with passengers at the bottom.  Cooper places illustrations on an edge crossing the gutter, one above the other.  Smaller illustrations fill single pages.

His details, worker badges, buildings, bridges, train numbers, flags on the trains, tiny, sketchy labels on the train items or parts of animals make the reader feel like they are being given an inside peek at an artist's personal journal.  As the trains carry people and goods, we are carried with these illustrations along every mile.  One of my favorite pages is with three small vignettes of two girls getting ready for bed, sitting on their bunks as the overhead light shines on them, one reading, the other with her teddy bear and the final of the two looking out at the moon, curtain pulled back with the light from outside coming inside.


While Homer will always have a special place in my heart after reading Train written and illustrated by Elisha Cooper, I felt a deep yearning for travel begin to grow.  Not only will you want to start planning your next trip, but this astonishing book will make you want to take that journey by train.  I should know, the Amtrak website is currently open in my browser.  Thank you Elisha Cooper for another stunning title.

In addition to the Author's Note, a small glossary is included.  Please follow the link to Elisha Cooper's website embedded in his name above.

UPDATE:  Be sure to head over to Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast to read about the process Elisha Cooper used to create this beautiful, memorable book.


Monday, June 18, 2012

A Dog's Heart

I was in my mid-twenties when a pair of black Labradors, sisters, Soot and Cinder, chose me. My first dogs ever. When I lost them, I lost a part of my heart. More than twenty years later, Xena my chocolate Labrador, thankfully selected me.

A dog's heart is huge; filled to the brim with unconditional love.  As humans we can only strive toward the love they have perfected so well.  They ask for little but give much.

When opening the front and back covers of Elisha Cooper's new book, Homer (Greenwillow Books), eyes moving from left to right across the two-page spread, we see the body of a yellow lab, soulfully gazing forward, a half smile playing about his mouth.  Above the curve of his back we read, Have you ever loved a dog? One day in the life of Homer has a great deal to tell readers.

Homer sits on the porch.
What does he want to do today?

A new morning has begun in the home along the ocean's shore.  Homer, paws at edge of the steps, greets the day and waits.  The house's door and doggie door both open as a trio of pooches, a Basset Hound, an Old English Sheepdog and a Scottish Terrier, burst forth eager to run  and romp.  Will Homer join them? 

No, thanks.

Each family member stops to ask Homer to join in their activities; searching in the field, strolling to the beach to play in the sand, swimming in the ups and downs of the water or taking a trip to the local market.  Homer says no to all, completely happy right where he is.  Watching them is all he needs.

Returning dogs, youngest daughter, older daughter, mother and father pause to share their adventures with Homer; dropped red balls, flowers in his fur, an ocean shell, a whispered conversation and a bag filled with groceries.  He gratefully accepts all their news as they return to spend the late afternoon gathered around him on the porch.  As the sky changes with the setting sun Homer stretches to go inside.

Readers follow Homer as he slowly moves through the familiar routine of his day's end.  Lamps shine in the living room as mother tucks in the two girls, father finishes up in the kitchen, and three tired dogs in various poses sleep on the floor. And Homer, he heads to his favorite blue chair where he curls and settles saying the three closing words.

If dogs could talk, without a doubt, they would say as Elisha Cooper has written it here.  Simply, eloquently the ease of summer, the joy in the day's offerings and Homer's place in this family's life are worded carefully.  Spanning along the pages' bottoms we readers drink in those thoughts like life's truths they are.

Steel blue endpapers like the colors of the ocean envelope the body of this title.  Followed by a double-page spread showing a bird's eye view of the home with the rising sun behind, field, beach and ocean stretching to the horizon, the title and verso information are shown.  I love Cooper's two word dedication:

For porches.

Full-color illustrations rendered in watercolors and pencil delight the senses; readers can feel the sea breeze, hear the gentle wash of the waves and the conversations, human and canine, carried to Homer as he watches knowing if they touch his fur it will be warm and smell of the sun.  Hues echoing the season and setting detail the day exquisitely.  Most of the single page pictures are framed in white but the panoramic display of Homer watching his family members blends to the edges of two pages in stunning, peaceful beauty.

In looking over my considerable stack of dog books, Homer written and illustrated by Elisha Cooper is my very favorite title...ever.  What Elisha Cooper has captured and created in words and pictures is a moving tribute to dogs, their wisdom and the love they can give especially in the caring family well portrayed in this title.  Having read this book so many times I've lost count, I never fail to shed a tear or two and sigh as I view the last two pages and read the final sentence; pure contentment.

Julie Danielson of Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast highlights Elisha Cooper's Homer on her blog and at Kirkus.  In her blog post she references two articles Cooper wrote at Greenwillow about Homer.  Be sure to read those two.  If you want to read more writing by Elisha Cooper head over to The Morning NewsI have also been following Elisha Cooper on Facebook where he has so generously shared his process in creating Homer.