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0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
From the author-illustrator of The Book of Mistakes comes a gorgeous picture book about caring for your own heart and living with kindness and empathy.
My heart is a window. My heart is a slide. My heart can be closed...or opened up wide.
Some days your heart is a puddle or a fence to keep the world out. But some days it is wide open to the love that surrounds you.
With lyrical text and breathtaking art, My Heart empowers all readers to listen to the guide within in this ode to love and self-acceptance.
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  • Reviews

    • The Horn Book

      March 1, 2019
      Grayscale monotype illustrations with warm yellow highlights illustrate Luyken's lyrical text about love and emotion. The art's luminescence is an apt choice for a picture book about the heart?not the tangible, beating heart but the intangible, feeling one: My heart is a window, / my heart is a slide. / My heart can be closed / or opened up wide. Luyken's decision to depict many children in minimal but varied settings as speakers of her first-person-singular text likewise enriches her project: this diverse group of children displays a range of emotions and states of being that might not have been as powerful if seen in and through a single protagonist. And, just as some of the (stylized) hearts hidden in the illustrations are less readily visible than others, some lines' meanings are more opaque than others. Instead of coming across as inaccessible or bewildering, however, the spare text and pictures leave room for reader reflection on what it might mean for one's heart to be, for example, a puddle?a stain?[or] cloudy and heavy with rain. Culminating spreads move from starlit darkness to incandescent sunshine, concluding with a rousing, affirming declaration: My heart is a shadow, / a light, and a guide. / Closed or open?/ I get to decide. megan dowd lambert

      (Copyright 2019 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2019
      Grayscale monotype illustrations with warm yellow highlights illustrate a lyrical text about love and emotion. The art's luminescence is an apt choice for a picture book about the intangible, feeling heart. First-person-singular text spoken by a diverse variety of children in different settings enriches the book and allows for a large range of emotions. The spare text and pictures leave room for reader reflection.

      (Copyright 2019 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • School Library Journal

      Starred review from February 1, 2019

      PreS-Gr 2-This message of this quiet book should be shouted from the rooftops. The theme is elusive at first as are the soft, somewhat tentative pictures. The story begins with a heart in a garden waiting to be nurtured by a little girl. The poetic text describes the heart in a number of unexpected ways. It's a window that can be opened or closed and sometimes it is a puddle or a stain. These metaphorical descriptions move children away from the anatomical and utile aspects of the heart (the pumper of blood with chambers and ventricles, etc.) and offers the idea of the heart as a reflection of the child in the world. The final words carry a lot of power: "I get to decide." The illustrations are crafted with water-based inks and pencils and predominantly feature gray and yellow, dark and light. Throughout, the unifying visual element is a yellow heart in a variety of forms. This can be read to the very youngest of listeners, but even upper elementary children would benefit tremendously from the ideas in this book. Educators can also use this work to show students the different meanings for a single word and the artistic use of metaphor in writing. VERDICT This must-buy for librarians and teachers has myriad educational uses; it begs to be read aloud, and it is a masterful blending of text and illustration.-Joan Kindig, James Madison University, Harrisonburg, VA

      Copyright 2019 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from December 15, 2018
      Lucid verse and transcendent monotype prints masterfully express how a heart can be "a window...a slide...closed / or opened up wide."Soothing, simple phrasing and masterful printmaking harness metaphors to make a heart's complexity accessible to children just recognizing its many manifestations. Recurring rhyme provides an ideal cadence for reading aloud and also a reassuring assertion: Feelings can change from one moment to the next, your heart might sometimes be "cloudy and heavy with rain," but just as the verse returns to rhyme, a heart can right itself. It "can grow," and it "can mend, / and a heart that is closed can still open again." Double-page spreads, inky with coal blacks and smudgy graphite grays, find luminosity and searing beauty through the introduction of a single color, an undauntedly optimistic ginkgo yellow that surges and glows. Pencil work adds specificity (freckles, eyeglasses, buttons, blades of grass) and sometimes emotional jaggedness (pelting rain, a steep, rickety slide). Young readers will see themselves in this impressive book's children, kids of all racial backgrounds, who hide behind closed curtains, trudge through rain, extend a bouquet of small heart-shaped flowers, stand under the protective boughs of a wondrous tree. The final pages acknowledge a heart's myriad, sometimes-incongruous roles ("a shadow, / a light, and a guide") and joyfully assert our own, ultimate self-governance: "Closed or open... // I get to decide."Sensitive, stunning words and pictures speak directly to young hearts. (Picture book. 6-11)

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • OverDrive Read

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:1.8
  • Lexile® Measure:320
  • Interest Level:K-3(LG)
  • Text Difficulty:0-2

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