If My Moon Was Your Sun: with CD audiobook and music

If My Moon Was Your Sun: with CD audiobook and music

by Georges Bizet (Composer), Andreas Steinhöfel (Author), Georges Bizet (Composer), Andreas Steinhöfel (Author), Georges Bizet (Composer), Sergei Prokofiev (Composer), Nele Palmtag (Illustrator)

Synopsis

With its loving portrayal of aging, caring for the elderly, and the keen nature of kids' sensibilities, this is a must-purchase for all libraries serving children. --School Library Journal, Starred Review A quiet story and pleasant music combine for a calming, peaceful, and even uplifting performance. --Kirkus Reviews Did you hear the story about Max, the boy who kidnapped his grandfather from a nursing home? You didn't see it on the news? Well, let me tell you about it. Max lives in a small town, much smaller than yours. His grandpa is losing his memory, but still remembers quite a bit. You can imagine how they hurried, Max and his grandpa, followed by old Miss Schneider, who insisted on coming along. Why were they in a hurry? Because everyone was after them. Max had skipped school to rescue his grandpa, and they were just starting out on what promised to be one of the best days of their entire lives. A touching story about dementia and the special relationship between grandparents and grandchildren, with full-color illustrations and a read-along CD audiobook featuring twelve classical pieces for children by Georges Bizet and Sergei Prokofiev.

$15.63

Save:$2.50 (14%)

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 80
Edition: Har/Com
Publisher: Plough Publishing House
Published: 16 Nov 2017

ISBN 10: 0874860792
ISBN 13: 9780874860795
Book Overview: Significant social media campaign to children's book buyers on Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest. Bulk giveaways to classical music radio stations to promote music and intergenerational interactions Blog tour Featured author page and product page on Plough.com Paid advertising in School Library Journal Giveaways on NetGalley, GoodReads, LibraryThing, and Amazon Book trailer using audiobook and pictures Shareable excerpts, pictures, and trailer promoted through Plough social channels - estimated 70,000 followers Partnership with organizations promoting intergenerational engagement POP materials

Media Reviews
In this import from Germany, a 9-year-old boy named Max sneaks his grandfather, who has dementia-the Great Forgetting-and another older woman, Miss Schneider, out of their nursing home. Gently, he leads them to a country meadow where his grandfather once proposed to his grandmother. He's fully aware that they'll be caught but determined that his grandfather should experience the peaceful green country setting anyway. His mission is successful. His grandfather slips into brief lucidity and offers Max gentle reassurance of his continued love. Exuberant Miss Schneider, rail thin and very cheery, dances! Frequent illustrations that look to be done in colored pencil are rendered in an unusual palette of just four or five vivid colors that effectively capture the child's determined yet spontaneous nature.... A CD accompanies this volume; a clear-voiced male reader pauses to give readers time to appreciate the occasional wordless double-page spread. An interlude of classical music follows.... About half the interludes are from A Summer Day by Sergei Prokofiev and the rest from Petit Suite by Georges Bizet. An interview follows the narrative, with author and illustrator offering insight into their thoughts as they crafted this unusual work. A quiet story and pleasant music combine for a calming, peaceful, and even uplifting performance. --Kirkus Reviews
Steinhoefel tenderly captures a child's fear and understanding of a loved one with dementia. Shortly after his ninth birthday, Max woke with a feeling that was endlessly deep and glowing that something was missing. Taking action, he walks across town to the nursing home where his grandfather has recently moved. Max sneaks his grandfather out of the nursing home and they go to the nearby meadow, a magical place where Max and his grandfather have spent many summer days and where Max felt watched over, protected and comforted for as long as he can remember. They talk about the moon and how you can sometimes see it during the day, but not always. Later Max expresses his greatest fear to his grandfather, That someday I'll ask, do you remember? And you won't remember anymore. And that someday...someday you will forget how much you love me. Max's grandfather assuages Max's fear with You can't always see the moon, but you know it's always there. Right? Steinhoefel's lush, evocative language, tingly with a sense of place and emotion, is accompanied by Palmtag's colored pencil illustrations that prove a perfect match with their whimsy and tenderness. VERDICT With its loving portrayal of aging, caring for the elderly, and the keen nature of kids' sensibilities, this is a must-purchase for all libraries serving children. -School Library Journal, Starred Review
Author Bio
Andreas Steinhoefel is an award-winning German writer of children's books. He received the Erich Kastner Prize for Literature in 2009 and the German Children's Literature Award in 2013. In addition to writing books for young readers, he also works as a translator, writes for television and radio, and edits graphic novels. Born in 1962 in Battenberg, Germany, he now lives in Berlin. Andreas Steinhoefel books translated into English include If My Moon Was Your Sun, The Spaghetti Detectives, An Elk Dropped In, and The Center of the World. Nele Palmtag, born in Boeblingen, Germany, in 1973, began a career as a state-certified occupational therapist before studying design, fashion, and illustration at the University of the Arts Bremen and at Hamburg University of Applied Sciences. She illustrates her own picture books as well as those of other authors. Her own works have been translated into several languages. She lives with her family in Hamburg-Altona.