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Tomorrow I'll be brave / words & pictures by Jessica Hische.

By: Hische, Jessica [author,, illustrator.]Publisher: New York : Penguin Workshop, 2018Description: 40 pages : illustrations (colour) ; 26 cmContent type: text | still image Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volume001: 43566ISBN: 9781524787011 (hbk.) :Subject(s): Self-actualization (Psychology) -- Juvenile literature | Non-Fiction 5+ | Personal IssuesDDC classification: 823.0222 HIS LOC classification: PZ7.1.H577 | Tom 2018Summary: Journey through a world filled with positive and beautifully hand-lettered words of widsom, inspiration, and motivation. As this book reminds readers, tomorrow is another day, full of endless opportunities - all you have to do is decide to make the day yours.
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book MAIN LIBRARY FICTION PRINT FICTION (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 113109

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Journey through the beautifully hand-lettered messages by award-winning illustrator Jessica Hische. This uplifting and positive book - now a New York Times best seller - encourages kids to promise that tomorrow, they will try new things, do their best, and be brave.

Tomorrow I'll be all the things I tried to be today:
Adventurous, Strong, Smart, Curious, Creative, Confident, & Brave.
And if I wasn't one of them, I know that it's OK.

Journey through a world filled with positive and beautifully hand-lettered words of widsom, inspiration, and motivation. As this book reminds readers, tomorrow is another day, full of endless opportunities--all you have to do is decide to make the day yours.

"Jessica Hische, one of the great designers and typographers, now shows herself equally adept at creating gorgeous and immersive images for young readers. This is a joyous burst of color."-- Dave Eggers , author of Her Right Foot

Journey through a world filled with positive and beautifully hand-lettered words of widsom, inspiration, and motivation. As this book reminds readers, tomorrow is another day, full of endless opportunities - all you have to do is decide to make the day yours.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Horn Book Review

Hische employs her considerable skills as a "lettering artist" to create seven spreads inspired by the theme: "Tomorrow I'll be..." Adventurous, strong, and confident are choices, with those words appearing in oversize, handwritten font; interspersed are spreads that provide examples and serve as inspiration: "It doesn't matter if I win as long as I have fun!" Bold-hued, graphic, and dynamic illustrations show various animals achieving their goals. (c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Kirkus Book Review

Young animals aspire to admirable traits.Two protagonistsa white bunny and a gray catcatalog their goals in first-person rhyming verse that could equally be coming from either of them. "Tomorrow I'll be ADVENTUROUS / I'll play and I'll explore // I'll make or learn or try something / I've never done before!" Illustrating that verse's first half, the bunny stands confidently in a sailboat on a red sea, while the catin the boat's crow's nestpeers through a spyglass at a treasure chest on a pink island. For the verse's second half"make or learn or try" something newvignettes showcase diving, painting, going to the dentist, and eating sushi with chopsticks. Unfortunately, casting sushi and/or chopsticks as "somethingnever done before" excludes and exoticizes readers for whom chopsticks and/or sushi are old hat. Hische's matte illustrations are friendly, with flat, retro-styled shapes. However, each aspirational adjective marches massively across the double-page spreads, overwhelming the other text, and several of them ("strong," "curious," "confident," "brave") are set in such fancy and enormous display type that new readers (and even some adults) will need to pause and squint before deciphering the word. The first-person voice, ostensibly a child's, sounds like an adult's wishful thinking: "Please teach me something new"; "I'll try my best"; "Tomorrow I'll be SMART / I'll think before I act"; "I'llthink about / how much you've helped me grow!"More projection than inspiration, with nothing to make up for it and fussy lettering to boot. (Picture book. 3-7) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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