an IMPRESSIVE premiere! | Bloom! A Little Book About Finding Love | Maria van Lieshout
books:
•
Bloom! A Little Book About Finding Love
Maria van Lieshout
Feiwel & Friends
, 2007 - 40 pages
average customer review:
based on 6 reviews
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highly recommended
The BEST Little Pig!
Bloom
is one of my new favorites!
I fell instantly in
love
with Bloom's character. She is someone we can all relate to, as each of us has fallen in love with something in our lives. Children have fallen in love with moments in time, or pets, or their favorite snack and adults with all of the above and more!
Maria has done such a lovely job with her lite drawing lines and splotches of color. The design by Molly Leach compliments everything Maria has created. There is such life and animation in
little
Bloom. I want to know what she does next..... Will she find a bigger flower to love?
I am sure we can all relate to her young feelings of love. I know both children and adults will fall in love with Bloom. I did.... and I am not quite as fickle as Bloom.
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If I loved you
Love
lends itself to the picture
book
format with remarkably variegated results. Sometimes you get a straight love story like Sara Pennypacker's Pierre In Love. Sometimes you've something a
little
sadder, if more honest, like Russell Hoban's, The Marzipan Pig. And sometimes you've a title that is oddly sweet like Maria Van Lieshout's, "
Bloom
". A story of both infatuation and love, Van Lieshout presents a short, infinitely adorable book that packs a wallop with apparent ease.
Though she is urged to play in a puddle, the soft pink piglet Bloom decides to go off and do her own thing one day. And since she loves flowers so much, down she lies beneath a canopy of lovely petals. To her amazement, a butterfly or "flying flower" swoops by and it's love at first sight. Bloom is immediately entranced, but despite her protestations of adoration the flying flower leaves her. When her friend sees her upset by her sudden abandonment he brings her the loveliest flower he can find and then leads her to a puddle where he has scattered the blooms all
about
. Charmed, Bloom agrees to play in that puddle, not even noticing the fickle butterfly swooping not far above.
The book isn't judgmental, which is interesting. Bloom falls for a butterfly, but there isn't a kind of "stick to your own kind" of message to be had here. In fact, we're never entirely certain that the butterfly itself wasn't leading Bloom on. I mean, when she sees it for the first time the text reads, "They looked into each other's eyes for a long time." But the minute Bloom brings up the L-word, that butterfly is out of there faster n' lightning. It doesn't have a face or appear as anything but your standard wings and antennae, but I label this flying flower a fly by night lover if ever there was one.
On the back cover of this book it says that Ms. Van Lieshout is originally from Holland and has since settled in San Francisco. I wouldn't have pegged her style as particularly Dutch, but when I found out where she was originally from it seemed natural. This book is all thin black lines and understated swoops of the pen. Van Lieshout then combines pen-and-inks, watercolors, and crayons at strategic points. The result is sometimes very spare and often quite striking. Emotions tend to be indicated by either a slight reddening in a character's face or, in moment of extreme emotion, the entire page will match what someone is feeling. When Bloom blushes it sometimes causes a whole sea of red to erupt around her. The blue butterfly she falls in love with is the only color in this book that isn't red-based, and I was particularly fond of the moment when it disappears above. As Bloom stands, four feet apart, nose pointed up in the air, only the smallest dot of blue is visible in a clear white sky above. And when she screams on the next page, a crayon cloud of anger and frustration emerges from her, reminding the reader of the pigeon's temper tantrum in Don't Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus!. This is a little book too, coming in at a mere 7" X 7". Smart move, since I don't think a large format could have supported the artist's spare style.
"Bloom" is in serious danger of coming across as an adult title in picture book form. Falling in love and then
finding
that the object of your affection doesn't love you back? Everyone gets that, though the romantic aspects are definitely post-pubescent. But I think "Bloom" leaves the door open enough to introduce other aspects of love. Kids who adore cats that don't love them back, for example. An editor once wondered whether or not kids would even dig a book about romantic love. But even if readers don't extrapolate this into other types of adoration, I could still see a serious audience for it. I was one of those kids obsessed with the notion of romantic love. I'd watch shows like Sesame Street with an eye on certain characters, hoping they'd hook up (and back then, they did). So yes. Love is very much a picture book friendly concept. Not everyone is gonna dig it, but not everyone digs train or dinosaur stories either and those tend to do pretty well.
When reviewers use the term "nice" it's widely considered to be backhanded praise. "Nice" suggests that the book in question is fine but not particularly literary. I would make an exception in the case of "Bloom", which I happened to find beautifully drawn, finely honed, and nice. Nice and sweet, this is best described as a gentle little sigh of a book. Worth reading.
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an IMPRESSIVE premiere!
Even kids too young to read the simple text will delight in reading
Bloom
's eloquent facial expressions and body language -- especially the tantrum this piggie throws after being abandoned by a flighty
love
. Adults will identify with Bloom's experience: the devoted suitor in the mud puddle comes to mean more than the flashier yet fickle fellow who initially catches Bloom's eye. This life-lesson is deftly delivered by van Lieshout's nimble pen and her sparing use of color washes to express the extremes of Bloom's passions. BLOOM is a pithy operetta in picture-
book
form. BRAVO! I hope this
little
diva returns for an encore!
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Delightful & fun. Full of emotion
What fun. A delightful
book
about
friendship and
love
. A perfect present for kids or adults any time of year, especially Valentines Day.
The wonderful illustrations capture
Bloom
's changing emotions with whimsy and heart. Infatuation, love, frustration, anger. And a satisfying ending the reader can really sink into.
A multi-leveled classic
Bloom
! is one of those rare children's
book
s that works on so many levels that adults are bound to
love
it, too. Maria van Lieshout has created an adorable and enduring character in Bloom, the
little
pig who doesn't see love when it is right in front of her snout.
Children will love this book for the simple, elegant art work and will identify with the raw emotions the main character experiences when she wants something just out of her reach. Adults will love it for the universal nature of its theme (after all, do we ever stop looking for love in all the wrong places?) and its perfect resolution of this porcine romance.
Bloom is a perfect gift for the child you love or the love of your life.
(And a clever alternative to chocolates on Valentine's Day.)
It's dangerous to predict what book will become a classic, but this just might be one!
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Bloom
isn?t interested in playing in messy mud puddles with other pigs. She?d rather galavant among pretty flowers. Bloom
LOVE
S flowers and other pretty things. She also likes attention. And when a beautiful butterfly, a ?flying flower? wafts by, she falls head over heels in love. But she soon learns that attraction is fleeting, and friendship brings a deeper, more satisfying love.
Maria Van Lieshout deftly, gently portrays the true meaning of love and friendship in story and pictures that are perfect for readers of all ages.
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