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Moonbird

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: UK Corgi Childrens 2007Description: 32pISBN:
  • 9780552550031
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • YL/DUN
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds
Kids Books Kids Books Colombo Children's Area Fiction YL/DUN Available

Order online
Age Group 8 - 12 years (Yellow Tag) CY00003585
Kids Books Kids Books Colombo YL/DUN Checked out Age Group 5 - 7 years (Green Tag) 30/03/2021 YB024530
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Orla is a boy in a bubble. He can't hear the sounds of the earth. He doesn't answer when his mother and father call his name. The magical Moonbird teaches Orla how to speak with his hands and listen with his eyes--but will his parents understand him? As children are drawn into this fanciful tale about deafness, they will be caught up in the luminous, gem-like illustrations.

5.99

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Booklist Review

A bubble blown by Moonchild floats to Earth and pops by young Prince Orla's ear, wrapping the child up in silence. The royal soothsayer tells Orla's inconsolable parents that the child is not deaf but can hear different sounds in different ways. One fateful day, the moonbird takes Orla to the moon garden, where the prince learns to speak with his hands and eyes. On his return, Orla tries to share his knowledge with his parents, but it is not until  Moonchild casts a bubble over the kingdom that the king and queen understand their son. Ray creates mixed-media magic with a jewel-toned palette and gracefully fantastical, detailed images, gilded with gold and silver. The story, whether treated as parable or fiction, has gaps in logic that make it less effective than the art, but Dunbar's language is direct and sometimes almost lyrical. Combine this slightly sentimental tale with more-practical materials to introduce sign language, or use it in a thematic unit on what makes each individual unique.--Del Negro, Janice Copyright 2007 Booklist

Kirkus Book Review

From the magical land of the silvery bubble-blowing Moonchild, a bubble popping in little Prince Orla's ear suddenly makes him profoundly deaf. His worried, joyless parents hire several ineffectual fools to restore their son to their hearing world. The most ridiculous looking one is ready to tie elephant-sized ears on the prince's head. The royal soothsayer understands immediately that the child comprehends the world with his eyes, and the soothsayer is commandingly credible, because he wears magical symbols: star, tree and bird. Graceful Moonbird comes to the rescue, flying the prince to a magical school where a gazelle and silver monkey teach him "eye music," and tell him he can teach his parents hand talking and silent mouthing. However, his parents are clueless until Moonchild blows an enormous bubble that bursts over their kingdom, changing their intricate yet barren landscape and their hearts. Ray's luminous art and lyrical text are heavy with symbolism: Those who understand sign language and the powers of observation are adorned in the most silver trees, birds and stars, and others find adornment as they learn. Young readers will understand with help the clear message that sign language education for children who are deaf is essential to their healthy growth, and that it is a tremendous step forward for all people to increase their observation skills to learn it. But this heavy, controversial message won't be swallowed easily. (Picture book. 5-7) Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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