Grains of Sand
by Sibylle Delacroix
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Pub Date Apr 15 2018 | Archive Date Jun 11 2018
Owlkids Books | Owlkids
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Description
Spare text will prompt readers to wonder and imagine their own possibilities, while illustrations in a palette of yellows and grays convey the sun-soaked joy and the lingering nostalgia of family vacations well remembered.
A Note From the Publisher
– Highlights the joy of imagination and inventiveness
– Celebrates summer vacation and family relationships
– New from Sibylle Delacroix, creator of Prickly Jenny and Blanche Hates the Night
– Highlights the joy of imagination and inventiveness
– Celebrates summer vacation and family relationships
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781771472050 |
PRICE | $16.95 (USD) |
PAGES | 32 |
Featured Reviews
I cannot praise Grains of Sand enough. The illustrations alone are splendid and engaging for the age range, the story itself short yet enchanting. I can see this becoming a nightly read in many households.
A short, cute story about imagination. Two children return from the beach and are very sad. When they find sand in shoes, they decide they will plant it and see what grows. Of course it is all beach and vacation related items. The illustrations are black and white except for blue and yellow. This actually accentuates the beach items which could be used as a discussion tool with children. It could also be a fun bedtime story based upon the ending. A good addition to a family library.
Arc COPY...beautiful pencil sketch illustrations with splashes of colour highlighting certain important objects. Very much a parable on summer memories, preserving those memories on the sad last day of summer (the memories seem to convey via sand grains) and the anticipation of going to the beach again next summer.
I cannot lie, once in a while a book comes along that just fits perfectly into your heart and this one did that for me. The illustrations are so endearing and you just want to hug the little characters and take them home with you.
When two wee children return home from their summer beach vacation their minds travel back to the great times they had there. While dumping the accumulated sand from her sandal big sister daydreams of all the fun they had at the beach. Then she gets a brilliant idea. What will happen if she and her sweet little brother Ulysses plant the sand she poured out of her shoe? What might grow? With great anticipation she tosses the precious sand into the wind and it scatters all across the garden bed.
Their imaginations ignite and they envision copious beach umbrellas that wave hello to the sun, a forest of pinwheels to fill the sails of a boat, and a giant crop of lemon-flavoured ice cream cones cropping up, just to name a few. How delightful!!!
The illustrations are brilliantly simple - black and white with smatterings of golden yellow and periwinkle blue that make them extremely unique and very eye-catching. The siblings have a tender-hearted relationship towards each other. A loving, caring father appears at dusk to scoop his little dreamers up in his arms and carries them off to bed. This book was translated from French by Karen Li and will be available April 15, 2018. It is highly, highly recommended by Storywraps.
What a lovely book. Gorgeous drawings relay the return from vacation with sadness, but imaginative hope for a return to vacation next year.
Beautifully written and illustrated story of a last day of a beach vacation. What would you grow with grains of sand?
Littles will love this book. Especially would make a fine gift for those getting ready to leave their beach vacations!
This was a great book about imagination. I really enjoyed the pictures and the pops of color.
I received an Arc of this book via Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.
This book is a poem in pictures. You can’t help but hear the sea, feel sand in your toes and dream of summer vacation. Beautifully illustrated with inviting text.
Absolutely adorable, engaging and imaginative story that is so relatable. Beautiful illustrations! Who wants summer vacation to end....no one. These children use their imagination to problem solve. Love it!
The cover of this book really drew me in, as it is reminiscent of books I loved as a child. The art style is beautiful, black and white illustrations with pops of blue and yellow on each page. It tells the story of a little girl who returns from a beach trip with her family to find her shoes full of sand. She and her little brother decide to plant the sand in their garden and imagine what may come to grow there.
This book takes you straight to the heart of childhood from the perspective of your little one. With simple yet stunning and captivating illustrations that evoke the imagination and the quintessential representation of the child’s mind at play.
The feeling of disappointment and let down when you return from a wonderful vacation is exactly where the story starts for these two little friends. And then one finds some grains of sand left behind inside her shoe. What should they do? Plant them of course. And then imagination takes over as to what will grow. These friends are precious and you can feel what they are thinking because we have all been there. This story is relatable and a classic. I love it!
Grains of Sand by Sibylle Delacroix is a captivatingly illustrated paean to the imagination of a child (or two in this case), which can be sparked by the smallest of inspirations. Even down to some grains of sand. A young girl and her brother return home from a day at the beach, and when the girl pours out some leftover sand from her shoe, her mind, exhibiting the joyfully plastic nature of a child's thoughts-unbound by the "rules" of reality-decides she and her brother should plant the "seeds" of sand. Then the two of them imagine what sort of crop might spring forth, each possibility a bright splash of yellow on following pages: "a field of beach umbrellas," a "forest of pinwheels," "a crop of ice cream," a sand castle, or a beach of "powdered gold." The last maybe offering up some grains to "fill the sandman's bags" her father suggests, upon seeing her rub her tired eyes. The book ends with a look ahead to next year, another visit to the beach and a new crop to harvest. The language is simple and while I could have done with a bit more poetry to it, its effective here. The real strength, beyond the depiction of the imagination, lies in the softly beautiful artwork. The simple black and white and grey are broken by an eye-catching blue that sometimes is a cap, sometimes shorts, sometimes a wave, and of course by the yellow sand creations. Delaroix makes excellent use of shading and shadow and there is a rich sense of detail and tone throughout. Truly lovely artwork here. Highly recommended.
This book has AMAZING ART! Most of the story is told through the art, and it is beautiful to look at. Pencils sketches with just the right pop of blue or yellow to create the magic that the children in the story feel. These grains of sand are magic. They feed the imagination, grow giant umbrellas, or a sea of windmills. A lovely book to be treasured for generations.
A young girl and her brother come back home after a family vacation; her shoes are filled with sand. What to do with all of it? Should they plant a field of umbrellas to wave at the sun? How about a forest of windmills, or a castle fort? The possibilities are as endless as a child's wish for the summer to stay. As the girl falls asleep in her father's arms, she extracts a promise that they'll return for more sand, next year. This sweet love letter to summer and family uses grainy gray and white artwork, with splashes of yellow and blue, and will enchant young readers and make us adults smile and remember our own summer vacations. You'll feel the sand run through your fingers and smell the ocean as you turn each page. It's the perfect way to greet a summer full of possibilities. Originally published in 2017 in French, this English translation of Grains of Sand has a starred review from Kirkus.
I really, really enjoyed reading Grains of Sand! I adore the illustrations and the splashes of blue and yellow throughout the pages! This book is sweet all the way around from the adorable sibling love and play to the imaginative aspect of the story! Grains of Sand is such a warm and cozy, make you feel good inside book! Perfect for bedtime! This book shows that the power of a child's imagination is so creative and limitless!
I love, love, loved this book! I loved how the pictures were black and white when the family was home from vacation but there were spots of color when they thought about the beach. I loved that the children imagined what would grow if they planted sand.
Grains of Sand is the story of arriving home after a vacation and wishing the getaway wasn't over. The first page is the family unloading the car:
"Today was the last day of our vacation. When we get home, Ulysses still has water in his eyes. I am as blue as the sea."
After a sister discovers sand in her sandals, left over from her family vacation, she and her young brother, Ulysses, daydream about what would come up if they planted the sand like seeds. Of course, every items refers back to their beloved vacation at the beach. The illustrations are fitting for the story; they are black and white with splashes of a calming blue and yellow. The entire tale alludes to the pleasant blue water and yellow sun and sand. The book is a perfect story for reading after returning from summer break or at bedtime.
Two children return home from a wonderful vacation to the beach. As they mourn the end of the vacation, the little girl finds sand in her sandal. The two children decide to plant the sand and dream what might grow from the sands, and in the process share their favorite parts of their vacation.
This is beautifully illustrated in black and white pencil sketches with highlights of yellow and blue. It makes the beach memories feel dream-like but also cheerful. I love the imagination of the two children - a field of beach umbrellas or lemon ice cream or a sand castle - and the way this lets them process the wonderful time they’ve had. A great read for kids after a vacation that leaves them feeling a little sad to be returning to real life. A good extension activity would be to read this and ask kids what would grow from their “grains of sand,” allowing them to share the favorite parts of their trip they wish they could bring home. (Perhaps do this instead of the “What I Did This Summer” typical return to school assignment, teachers.) Definitely recommending for our elementary library to purchase this title.
Grains of Sand by Sibylle Delacroix is a simply gorgeous book perfect for the littlest of littles and the oldest of vacation lovers.
When two children arrive home after a vacation at the beach they feel “as blue as the sea”. When they realize that they have brought some of the beach home, trapped in their shoes, they decide to plant it and go on an incredible journey through the imagination to figure out what will grow.
This book is a beautiful mediation through the imagination, leading to questioning and discovering and storytelling. What do you think will grow if you plant beach sand? The incredible illustrations in black and white with yellows and blues scattered in evoke all the beach you feelings we experience when we are out on vacation and free from the constraints of the daily routine and the feelings we long for when our vacation comes to an end. It is there where we can find a “field of umbrellas, and a forest of pinwheels”. Sibylle Delacroix uses the most incredibly descriptive language, you don't even need the pictures of the book to see the story unfold. Definitely a book to have on hand upon returning from vacation or perhaps to even bring with you.
This is a fabulous book with amazing illustrations. The details of toes, sand, etc. are incredible. And the story of imagination, sadness of something ending, and hope for newness is one to cherish.
Imagine coming home from a beach vacation as a young child, filled with longing for sun-packed days and endless sandcastles. Away from the water, our wistful protagonists—an adorable brother and sister—are clearly disappointed that the trip has ended and are craving more of their sandy playtime. With minds still reeling with gold and blue beach hues, our little duo decides to plant their leftover sand. Watering these unique sand seeds with their imagination, the children watch and skip along as umbrellas, pinwheels, and ice cream grow. Eventually calm and sated, they head to bed.
Although ideas like waves of laughter painted with ocean surf might be more abstract to younger children, Grains of Sand is a beautifully written and illustrated book that evokes nostalgia in all ages—including myself. The sweet, simple concept of bringing home the beach and overcoming forlornness is perfect for pre-k to second graders. The color-penciled illustrations, using a base of three colors, tightly wraps the picturebook in the serenity of memories meant to console our protagonists and spark new inspiration. I can relate when I come from home the beach. Like these children, I should take my ocean-induced inner peace and despondency and create.
I would like to thank NetGalley and Owlkids Books for providing me with a free ARC in exchange for a fair and honest review. Grains of Sand will be published on April 15, 2018.
Coming home from a vacation is never easy, particularly if you had an amazing time. In “Grains of Sand” a girl and her brother have returned from their visit to the sea. They’re missing the ocean when little girl discovers sand in her sandal and decides to scatter it in the field to see what might grow. Will it be beach umbrellas, pinwheels, or lemons? Perhaps a strong castle wall?
This beautifully illustrated picture book rendered in pen and ink is stunning and bright though it only makes use of shades of gray, white, yellow and splashes of blue. Pair with My Garden by Kevin Henkes for a magical trip into the imagination of a child.
Two children imagine what might grow when they plant the grains of sand that have come home from vacation with them in their shoes. What a sweet little book! Grains of Sands perfectly sums up the feeling of melancholy that comes when vacation is over. The illustrations are wonderful and the sparse use of color adds to the atmosphere of the book.
This will easily become one of my favorite picture books of the year. It's the last day of summer and two siblings plant grains of sand and imagine what will grow from them. Beautiful illustrations and great for the imagination. A great book to take to the beach.
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