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Rating: Summary: A Book for Everyone Review: No picture book could possibly proclaim that "Black is beautiful" any better than this. A splendid mélange of color and cut outs, "Beautiful Blackbird" is the story of how the birds of the world got their black spots and stripes. It's not too dissimilar from Rudyard Kiplings Just-So story of "How the Leopard Got Its Spots" in this way. When all the multi-colored birds of Africa beg blackbird (the most beautiful of all the birds) to paint some black on them, the able creature readily agrees. Thus, the world today is filled with birds of every shape and color, all touched by black in some way.No need to go digging for a metaphor here. The chorus sung by the happy aviary ranges from, "Blackbird is the most beautiful one" to "Black is beautiful, uh-huh!". And these birds know how to dance too. Here's a lyric from their party: "Tip tap toe to the left, spin around, Toe tap tip to the right, stroke the ground. Wings flip-flapping as you glide, Forward and backward in a Show Claws Slide". As always, I must warn you that if you intend to read this book to children you must have at least one musical or rhythmic bone in your body. This book sports a bouncy catchy beat. To deny it is to deny much of the nature of the book itself. A great resource for those parents that want to make it very clear from the beginning that black is the most beautiful color of them all. It's a color readily shared, though, as Blackbird himself points out, "Just remember, whatever I do, I'll be me and you'll be you".
Rating: Summary: Blackbird power Review: No picture book could possibly proclaim that "Black is beautiful" any better than this. A splendid mélange of color and cut outs, "Beautiful Blackbird" is the story of how the birds of the world got their black spots and stripes. It's not too dissimilar from Rudyard Kiplings Just-So story of "How the Leopard Got Its Spots" in this way. When all the multi-colored birds of Africa beg blackbird (the most beautiful of all the birds) to paint some black on them, the able creature readily agrees. Thus, the world today is filled with birds of every shape and color, all touched by black in some way. No need to go digging for a metaphor here. The chorus sung by the happy aviary ranges from, "Blackbird is the most beautiful one" to "Black is beautiful, uh-huh!". And these birds know how to dance too. Here's a lyric from their party: "Tip tap toe to the left, spin around, Toe tap tip to the right, stroke the ground. Wings flip-flapping as you glide, Forward and backward in a Show Claws Slide". As always, I must warn you that if you intend to read this book to children you must have at least one musical or rhythmic bone in your body. This book sports a bouncy catchy beat. To deny it is to deny much of the nature of the book itself. A great resource for those parents that want to make it very clear from the beginning that black is the most beautiful color of them all. It's a color readily shared, though, as Blackbird himself points out, "Just remember, whatever I do, I'll be me and you'll be you".
Rating: Summary: A Book for Everyone Review: The Reader from Texas could not be more wrong. This is so far from being a "racist" book that the criticism doesn't even make sense. This is an incredibly beautiful story that, emphatically, CANNOT be reduced to a "skin color" story --- it's a metaphor for any and every sort of difference, and how sharing what we have makes us all more beautiful. This is a very simple yet moving story, and to criticize it because the bird is "only admired for being black" is to miss the point. To quote C.S. Lewis in another context, someone so blind who could read this book as racist "could look all over the sky at high noon on a clear day and not see the sun." Ashley Bryan is a genius, a consummate story-teller --- I have seen him perform many, many times -- and I have never seen anyone better able to bring together, in complete joy, audiences of every color of the rainbow and every age. A beautiful, beautiful book!
Rating: Summary: A big letdown! Review: When I bought Beautiful Blackbird, I anticipated a story that would capture my heart. I was extremely disappointed. The "black is beautiful and every other color is not" theme comes through loud and clear. Never in the story is the blackbird admired for anything other than his color. Fortunately, he agrees to share it by painting black brew onto the other birds who then celebrate their "black" spots. If it was intended to be a story that brings readers together, it has sadly missed the mark because it reeks of racism.
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