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Farm
 
 

Farm [Hardcover]

Elisha Cooper
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product Description

Product Description

There is so much to look at and learn about on a farm--animals, tractors, crops, and barns. And children feeding animals for morning chores! With lyrical writing and beautiful illustrations that capture the rhythms of the changing seasons, Elisha Cooper brings the farm to life.

About the Author

Elisha Cooper is the award-winning author of Beach, which won the 2006 Society of Illustrators Gold Medal. Other picture books include A Good Night Walk, Magic Thinks Big, and Dance!, a New York Times Best Illustrated Book of the Year. His adult books include the memoir Crawling: A Father's First Year. Elisha Cooper lives with his family in New York City.

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Front Cover | Excerpt | Back Cover
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4.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Farm, May 7 2010
By 
Tami Brady "Whole Health" (Calgary, Canada) - See all my reviews
(HALL OF FAME)    (TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Farm (Hardcover)
Farm takes the reader through a year on the farm. There quite a bit of activity that happens each and every month. There are crops to plant, harvest, and transport. There are animals to tend. You also have to be on watch to make sure that the dog doesn't steal the green beans.

This book has lots of great illustrations. I found that the younger readers preferred to just discuss the illustrations as the amount of text on each page was a little long and needed to be summarized. Nonetheless, I enjoyed the story and thought it provided a wide range of things to talk about.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Celebrates Living off the Land, April 22 2010
By 
Nicola Manning (Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
(HALL OF FAME)    (TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Farm (Hardcover)
This book follows a family farm, consisting of a man, wife, boy and girl, from early in the spring until late in the fall. Unlike most cutesy-wutesy farm picture books, this one shows the real life running and operation of cultivating the fields, chores, livestock, weather and daily life found throughout the year on a farm. It shows the agricultural lifestyle of a family that lives in a rural area and what the children's lives are like, doing chores before and after school and spending time playing outside and with the animals. The book is quite textual, while not actually having a lot of text per page, there is certainly enough text that little ones may get squirmy listening to this book. Grades 1 to 3 will find the book most useful and entertaining with the higher end finding the most enjoyment. The book is well-written with an engaging voice. My only complaint is the illustrations. I just can't say I'm a fan of Cooper's work. I enjoyed the landscapes and scenes of the buildings but the people with no facial features and animals are not my cup of tea being tiny squiggles that look like they are missing parts and just barely recognizable. Cooper, however, has won awards so obviously I'm in the minority. A good book to celebrate agriculture, rural life and living off the land.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.9 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)

14 of 14 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Chicks and ducks and geese better scurry, Nov 16 2010
By E. R. Bird "Ramseelbird" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Farm (Hardcover)
As a children's librarian living in New York City, I get a really skewed view of the world. For example, a book like Christoph Niemann's Subway will get released and all the children I see are hugely into it. For them, the subway is a part of life and that book shows them what they already know. What I have to remind myself is that Manhattan children, for all their charms, are aberrations. Lots of kids in the United States haven't a clue what a working subway system looks or feels like. So when a book like Farm falls into my lap my brain has to do a 180 in the opposite direction. Lots of city kids have never been to a real working farm before. They understand them in the vaguest of senses. Growing up they learned that animals lived on the farm with a moo moo here and a baa baa there. Actual working farms, however, are the kinds of things you see outside your car window on your way from one part of the country to another. They are near magical places. All that land. All that sky. That's why I'm delighted that a book like Farm even exists. It has a twofold purpose. For kids who have never experienced a farm firsthand, it provides a glimpse into a world as different and magical as any fantasy land. And for kids who already have a working knowledge of farms and the countryside, the book is a magnificent mirror that takes the practical beauty of their everyday lives and spins it into storytelling gold.

We begin in that time when spring has only started to make some headway against winter. When the days start to warm up but the fields are just a mass of brown dirt. We meet the equipment, the family, the hired hands, and the animals. We watch the tiller turn the soil, "the fields change from the color of milk chocolate to the color of dark chocolate." We see seeds being planted, rains come, and crops grow. We meet the cats and the cows, and follow the family into town on occasion. There are summer nights and days and kids going back to school once again. To crops come in, the winter falls, and it's all in the life of a single farm.

Kids love process. Not all kids, but a lot of them. They like to know how things are made and how things come to be. Farm, in a sense, is all about process, but it doesn't get hung up on the concept. So you'll learn about different kinds of farms, how tractors work, and what the various seasons resemble. But you'll also see the downtime of the farmer and his kids. They go to town and chat with neighbors. The boy amuses himself by throwing tomatoes at birds or building forts out of straw. The girl, who is getting older, spends time reading books or staying away from home more and more often. Best of all, kids these days have a tendency to think that farming is an occupation of the past. So this book works in current technology without making it so prominent that the book will date anytime soon. A broken tractor means that a farmer has to call a neighbor on his cell to get it fixed. Much later during the harvesting "The farmer checks the corn's yield on his computer and talks with other farmers on his cell phone." And during a nighttime shot where the text reads, "On the farm, even when it's dark, some animal is always awake", in the distance is someone in the house working on a computer screen of some sort.

Cooper keeps his descriptions spare and to the point. There's a poetry to his language here. With the shortest of sentences you know more than even he is telling you. Without saying that the boy in the story is a bit of a troublemaker, Cooper tells you as much. Without describing the fact that the girl is becoming a teenager, we get that distinct impression. And then there are passages that just take you into the story completely. After a surprise storm the book says, "Sheets of water sweep the farm, hammering roofs and rattling windows. And then it is over. The corn all bends in one direction as if to say, The storm went that way." And if Cooper doesn't show that image, it's because he doesn't have to. It's already deeply embedded in your mind.

It took me a long time before I realized what Mr. Cooper's style reminded me the most of. As a kid, I had a penchant for Anno's books. These were wordless epics. Sort of proto Where's Waldo? spreads where recurring characters could crop up, disappear, and then show themselves once more. Anno had an ability to capture the complex with the simplest of lines. Cooper shares that talent. In this book, objects, people, and animals are sometimes rendered with just the barest squiggle of paint. A chicken pecking is just a single continuous line with some watercolor spotted in. A cat cleaning herself is a perfect curved angle of head against body. As for the humans themselves, in many ways they are the least detailed creatures in this book. Cooper realizes that a human brain, when reading this book, is going to make the connections necessary to recognize that this three-quarter black outline with the faintest shadings for pants and hair is, in fact, another human. Other drawings require more work because our minds are disinclined to make those connections. The roosters, for example, come off as some of the most beautifully detailed animals in the book (note the cover). So there's definitely a logic to what Cooper does and does not detail intricately. And looking back at previous books of his like Beach, you can see he's been perfecting the style for years.

In books like Beach, the star is the setting. That's certainly the case for Farm as well. Only the cats, the dog, and the roosters in this book have names. The humans do not, and they are referred to in only the vaguest of terms (The Farmer, the boy, the girl, etc.). It's the farm itself that you're meant to focus on. Cooper allows himself a variety of sweeping panoramas at different times of year or during different weather patterns. You see the farm from a variety of different angles too, which I appreciated. And considering the sheer amount of open sky, it's a pleasure to look at the farm when there are fast moving clouds or storm or even at night when there are just stars. In fact, if you look at the starlit scene closely, you can see that Cooper has worked in some real constellations. I could make out the Great Dipper and Orion's Belt without any difficulty. That's a detail that most artists wouldn't bother with, so I am grateful to him for taking the time.

The first thing you see when you open this book are the reddish pink endpapers. They are fields from above, much as you might see while traveling in an airplane. It occurs to me that this book would make ideal airplane reading for those kids who only ever see the countryside from a height of more than 5,000 feet. I won't say that this book is for every child out there. There's a slow patient pace to it that may not jive with kids who need books to capture their interest every waking moment. But for the kid that is curious, that likes a title to take them into another world, or who just needs something a little more realistic than usual, Farm is a gift. There's a beauty to it that cannot be beat. For some, this book will be loved and treasured. Remembered and put away for another generation to discover. It's the best farm book, the best realistic farm book, I have ever read for kids.

Ages 5-10.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Like "The Big Red Farm" for older kids, Aug 19 2010
By W. Johnson - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Farm (Hardcover)
Wonderful pictures, excellent pacing, and digestible truths about farming make this book a real delight. Highly recommended.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful illustrations and language, July 28 2010
By Carol - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Farm (Hardcover)
The seasons of a farm come alive in this beautifully written and charmingly illustrated book. The author presents different segments of life on the farm through its living creatures from the farmer and his family to the chipmunks and rabbits. The details make the reader feel as though they have been invited for a visit that is not only warm and welcoming but informative as well. Cooper includes magnificent vocabulary that spans farm related words and rich descriptions of creatures' activities. By then of this book, you'll be yearning for a visit to the country.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 11 reviews  4.9 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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