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Bad Bye, Good Bye

Bad Bye, Good Bye

Previous price: $16.99 Current price: $6.98
Publication Date: April 1st, 2014
Publisher:
Clarion Books
ISBN:
9780547928524
Pages:
32
WinterRiver Books & Gallery
8 on hand, as of Apr 25 12:27pm
(Children's)
On Our Shelves Now

Description

“Bad truck, bad guy; bad wave, bad bye . . .” A boy and his family are packing up their old home, and the morning feels scary and sad. But when he arrives at his new home, an evening of good byes awaits: bye to new friends, bye to glowing fireflies, bye to climbing trees. The New York Times bestselling author Deborah Underwood's spare text and the Boston Globe–Horn Book Award winner Jonathan Bean's lush, layered illustrations perfectly capture the complex emotions of moving day. The child-centric transition from dreary morning to cheerful evening comforts young readers facing big changes of their own.

About the Author

Deborah Underwood has written numerous picture books, including the New York Times bestsellers The Quiet BookThe Loud Book!, and Here Comes the Easter Cat and the Caldecott Honor–winning Outside In. She lives in Northern California with her feline muse, Bella.

Jonathan Bean's illustrations and writings have received widespread recognition. He has won the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award twice, for At Night and Building Our House.  

Praise for Bad Bye, Good Bye

"Underwood's simple, understated text. . . combines with Bean's expressive ink-and-watercolors to convey a child's visceral, emotional perspective on a long-distance move."
—Booklist, starred review "Underwood’s ultra-succinct verse hits all the emotional marks that go along with a big transition…Bean, meanwhile, seems to take the topic to heart by moving in a new direction himself. He does wonderful things with light, starting with a gloomy rain scene and ending with soft, welcoming twilight."
—Publishers Weekly, starred review "This is a useful depiction of a family's physical move, but the strength is in the emotional journey that's expressed with a raw honesty."
—Kirkus "Concisely chosen, two-word phrases accompany the atmospheric illustrations, which aptly portray the youngster's changing emotions and tell the complete story."
—School Library Journal

"This is a lovely portrayal of a child experiencing change as well as a graceful example of spare storytelling."
—Bulletin —