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Summary
Summary
All quiet is not created equal. In this irresistibly charming picture book, many different quiet moments are captured, from the anticipation-heavy "Top of the roller coaster quiet" to the shocked-into-silence "First look at your new hairstyle quiet." The impossibly sweet bears, rabbits, fish, birds, and iguanas are all rendered in soft pencils and colored digitally, and, as in all of the best picture books, the illustrations propel the story far beyond the words. A sure-to-be-a-classic bedtime favorite. Awards: 2011 ALA Notable Children's Book, 2010-2011, New York Times bestseller, 2011 CCBC Choices, 2011 NCTE Notable Children's Trade Book, 2010 New York Times Notable Book, 2010 Publishers Weekly Best Book of the Year, 2010 School Library Journal Best Book of the Year
Author Notes
Deborah Underwood grew up in Walla Walla, Washington. Her father was a math professor and her mother taught English. After college, she became a street musician, then she worked in an office typing memos for accountants. During her breaks she would write screenplays. She finally decided to write for kids. Deborah also started writing nonfiction at the suggestion of her publisher.
Her children's titles include: The Quiet Book, The Christmas Quiet Book, A Balloon for Isabel, Sugar Plum Ballerinas, and The Loud Book. Her nonfiction titles include: Mexico or Bust, Animal Secrets, 101 Ways to Save the Planet and Ballroom Dancing. In 2014 her title, Here Comes The Easter Cat, made The New York Times Best Seller List.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (6)
School Library Journal Review
K-Gr 1-This gentle picture book subtly explores the many different kinds of "quiet." Bears, rabbits, porcupines, mice, owls, moose, and wombats are depicted in situations that effectuate the notion of quiet throughout the daily life of a young child. For example, the "first one awake quiet" shows a rabbit doing his morning stretches. In "Right before you yell, 'SURPRISE!' quiet," three animal friends crouch behind a couch. "Making a wish quiet" presents a contemplative porcupine sitting on a stool wearing a party hat. A bear and a rabbit playing tag with the waves at the beach symbolize, "Best friends don't need to talk quiet." The soft, matte feel of the illustrations, created with pencil, are digitally enhanced, and are priceless. The animals' facial expressions and body language are endearing. White space is used creatively to emphasize the mostly gray or brown palette. All of the scenarios are child-centric and realistic. A delightful and enchanting choice for storytime or sharing one-on-one.-Anne Beier, Hendrick Hudson Free Library, Montrose, NY (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
There are many kinds of quiet," Underwood (Pirate Mom) writes, and this treasure of a book-which is appropriately gentle in both its understated text and artwork-catalogues many sorts of quiet that readers will recognize instantly. Some are lovely ("First one awake quiet"; "Lollipop quiet"); some less so ("First look at your new hairstyle quiet"); and some are out-and-out problems ("Thinking of a good reason you were drawing on the wall quiet"). Throughout, Liwska's (Little Panda) subtly engaging illustrations, single-page vignettes in muted rusts, greens, and browns, imagine a community of young, delicately furred animals who ably reflect the emotions that each type of quiet elicits. A young moose's antlers peek provocatively from behind a swiveling office chair ("Hide-and-seek quiet"); a bear holds its paw over its eyes as a nurse prepares a hypodermic ("Pretending you're invisible quiet"); and an owl looks upwards with awe and clasps its wing to its chest ("First snowfall quiet"). Underwood's taxonomy of quiet will evoke soft smiles from listeners who are getting ready for "bedtime kiss" quiet (and possibly, even later, for "What flashlight?" quiet). Ages 3-5. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Horn Book Review
Within a youngster's busy day there are "many kinds of quiet," from "trying not to hiccup quiet" to "sleeping sister quiet." Clever illustrations featuring different animal characters capture the essence of each hushed moment. Soft colored-pencil art in a muted palette of gray, brown, and green provides a stylish match to the book's soothing tone. (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Review
This gallery of quietude works for bedtime or calming down while also acknowledging that some quiet moods are less than happy. Each page shows one type of quietness, from classics such as, "Sleeping sister quiet," to the creative locale of "Swimming underwater quiet," to the delightful specificity of "Trying not to hiccup quiet." As these young children (moose, bear, rabbit, mouse and porcupine) move from scene to scene, they experience some contented silences (watching a robin, skipping rocks with a friend) and some tinged with insecurity ("First look at your new hairstyle quiet"), regret ("Jelly side down quiet"a sandwich falling to the floor) or worry ("Last one to get picked up from school quiet"). The final sequencea nighttime car ride in the snow, peaceful steps to bedtimemakes a comforting end. Liwska colors her finely hatched pencil drawings with low-value, low-intensity hues, matching the theme of low aural volume with a muted but detailed visual quality that invites a close look. Soothing and layered. (Picture book. 3-5)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Silence is the story in these simple scenarios, featuring young animal characters, that show suspense, eloquence, and surprise in what looks like emptiness. The tense scenes between characters balance quiet before a big noise: at the top of a roller coaster; before a concert starts; right before someone yells, Surprise! Then there is the magical transformation of a silent snowfall and the comfort of a bedtime kiss. The digitally colored pencil illustrations show a cast of young animals--bear, rabbit, porcupine, owl, and more--and some of the illustrations may be a bit muted for young preschoolers. But children will enjoy talking about the feelings that are shown, and every page tells a different story. The most moving scenes leave space for imagining. Best friends don't need to talk, for example, is illustrated with a blissful scene of togetherness that children will relate to their own lives.--Rochman, Hazel Copyright 2010 Booklist
New York Review of Books Review
"There are many kinds of quiet: First one awake quiet; jelly side down quiet; don't scare the robins quiet." Underwood's beautifully spare text follows this pattern throughout, accompanied by Liwska's illustrations of animals (colored in an appropriately hushed palette). In one image, the animals, in a convertible, drive windblown through a snowstorm: "car ride at night quiet."