Moveable Feasts
By
Jerry Griswold
In addition to being moveable feats, Pop-up Books are Moveable Feasts. As bookstore owners observe, these kinds of books are flying off the shelves. Deservedly so. We are in the midst of a Golden Age of Pop-Up Books which, in terms of complexity and beauty, go way beyond what was customary before. One of the geniuses of this Golden Age is Robert Sabuda, and his The 12 Days of Christmas provides a good introduction to the amazing leap forward in pop-up design that has been occurring these days. On its last page, you encounter a huge, three-dimensional Christmas tree, folding up from the page, surrounded by gifts and decorated with actual twinkling (battery-powered) lights. Just as gifts accumulate in the traditional song (from “a partridge in a pear tree” to “twelve lords a leaping”), awe accumulates as you recognize what a self-styled “paper engineer” like Sabuda can do with glue and cuts and folds. The 12 Days of Christmas is a wonderful holiday gift to share with children.
Creating this pop-up, Sendak teamed with another major name in “paper engineering,” Matthew Reinhart. His six designed pages are impressive (gothic as well as silly) and structured by a duality: the main pop-up on each of Reinhart’s pages shows the monsters’ efforts to frighten Sendak’s buoyant boy, while each fold-out envelope on the right shows him helping or taming the ghouls. Perhaps the most impressive feature is an amazing “spinner” in the middle where the Mummy’s wrappings are unwound as the page is opened.
Since these can be expensive purchases, we should weigh the pro’s and con’s of pop-ups. Teachers have complained that kids are distracted by the mechanisms of the book and often ignore the text; indeed, some pop-ups (like David A. Carter’s Blue 2 and Sabuda’s Winter’s Tale) largely lack a story and seem more an impressionistic tour de force of design where the medium is the message. Then, too, another shortcoming of these productions is their fragility. While covers sometimes advise “Recommended for ages 3 and up,” it is easy to imagine these objects would not survive everyday use but are meant to be brought out now and then on special occasions.
Throughout his career, Hans Christian Andersen told stories in the company of children by means of elaborate scissor-cuttings and collages of pictures; for him, the story did not reside in words or fixed typography upon the page, but in the moment of telling or reading. On our part, we may object that the young are slow readers because they are so easily distracted and, for example, like to pause and ponder pictures. The truth is--as this new generation of pop-ups remind us--children “read” in a different way. Not especially eager to get to the end, they want to dally and dwell inside the book’s constructed world. ............................ The 12 Days of Christmas: A Pop-Up Celebration Mommy? Encyclopedia Prehistorica Dinosaurs: The Definitive Pop-Up Encyclopedia Prehistorica Sharks and Other Sea Monsters: The Definitive Pop-Up Blue 2: A Pop-Up Book for Children of All Ages Winter’s Tale: An Original Pop-Up Journey
Pop-Up Books The contemporary pop-up book is an engineered work of art, treating readers of all ages to three-dimensional magic.
Copyright © 2009 Parents' Choice Foundation. All rights reserved.
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