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Start: 1:00 pm
End: 3:00 pm
We Are Honored To Welcome Three-Time Caldecott Winning Author/Illustrator
DAVID WIESNER
Please remember that all books presented for signing must be purchased through the Clinton Book Shop.
David Wiesner is one of the best-loved and most highly acclaimed
picture book creators in the world. His books have been translated into
more than a dozen languages and have won numerous awards in the United
States and abroad. Three of the picture books he both wrote and
illustrated became instant classics when they won the prestigious
Caldecott Medal: Tuesday in 1992, The Three Pigs in 2002, and Flotsam
in 2007, making him only the second person in the award's long history
to have won three times. He has also received two Caldecott Honors, for
Free Fall and Sector 7.
Wiesner grew up in suburban New Jersey, known to his classmates
as "the kid who could draw." He went on to become a student at the
Rhode Island School of Design, where he was able to commit himself to
the full-time study of art and to explore further his passion for
visual storytelling. He soon discovered that picture books were the
perfect vehicle for his work.
Wiesner generally spends several years creating each new book.
Many versions are sketched and revised until the story line flows
smoothly and each image works the way he wants it to. He creates
three-dimensional models of objects he can't observe in real life, such
as flying pigs and lizards standing upright, to add authenticity to his
drawings.
Take a look at the wonderful work of David Wiesner by scrolling down.
Start: 1:00 pm
End: 3:00 pm
Welcome To The Clinton Book Shop
D.L. REED
It is mid-summer on the remote island of Lyteria when an unimaginable
catastrophe destroys the city of one of the island’s tiniest resident
populations, the beebolls. Accustomed to living in a well-ordered,
close-knit society, beebolls suddenly find themselves homeless, hungry
and defenseless. Even worse, winter is only a few months away and the
tiny creatures are faced with the seemingly impossible task of having to
rebuild their homes and food processing capabilities before the
temperature drops and they risk freezing or starving to death. In a
desperate effort to reestablish their orderly little world as fast and
efficiently as possible, the tiny creatures create a bureaucracy to
oversee rebuilding their city, a bureaucracy that soon takes on a life
of its own. As time quickly slips away, beebolls become more and more
focused on the processes and procedures for rebuilding the city, and
less and less focused on the actual construction. Even worse, they
become so distracted by their predicament that they lose sight of that
which is most important of all: what it means to be a beeboll.
Suitable for all ages, The Island of Lyteria and the Beebolls is an
endearing, sometimes comical story of survival against seemingly
insurmountable odds. Readers who have had experience being thwarted by
red tape may find it particularly enjoyable.
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