Fotografía de autor

Emmanuel Bourdier

Autor de Hazelnut Days

16 Obras 42 Miembros 3 Reseñas

Obras de Emmanuel Bourdier

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Miembros

Reseñas

Reading Level: 5-7 years
No Awards
 
Denunciada
Shakari | otra reseña | Oct 26, 2021 |
A young boy visits his father in prison in this lovely, heartfelt picture-book from France. His complicated feelings about the man - his simultaneous love and admiration for him, and his anger and hatred of him, because of the pain he has caused his mother - are all explored. The narrative is both poetic and matter-of-fact, capturing the deprivations of imprisonment - the tiny window, the snide guard - and also the expansive power of emotion - the hope for a reunion outside prison, the warm feelings when the father laughs, the despair when he cries. At the conclusion of the book, the visit must come to an end, but the boy leaves with hope: he will return the next week with hazelnuts for his father...

Originally published as Les jours noisette, and translated into English by the Hong Kong-based publisher minedition, Hazelnut Days addresses a difficult topic, one not often seen in the picture-book world. There are exceptions of course - the marvelous Jacqueline Woodson's Visiting Day, for instance - but this is the first example of the form that I have seen in quite some time that is about a child with a parent in the prison system. I found it quite moving, and thought that text and image - the art is done by Zaü, the pen name of French artist André Langevin - worked seamlessly together to capture the emotional resonance of each scene. I think this is one I would recommend for an older audience, compared to your average picture-book, unless the child in question is actually experiencing what the narrator here is.
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Denunciada
AbigailAdams26 | otra reseña | Jun 8, 2018 |
Sur la vie d'un chien enfermé dans un refuge de la SPA

Un petit texte choc, entre laisse et attente, entre désespoir et envie de vivre. Emmanuel Bourdier opte pour des chapitres très courts, parfois juste une phrase, un mot. Voici cette vie banale et froide comme la pluie. Cette vie de chien, derrière les barreaux et la cage en béton. On le nomme Renaud, mais cela n’a pas beaucoup d’importance. Ce sont surtout les yeux lassés de solitude, des aboiements désespéré, que l’ont retiendra. Une captivité que l’on voudrait meilleur, une mort que l’on espère le plus tard possible… pour qu’enfin un maître vous adopte. Un texte qui se lit aisément et qui assume sa froideur pour mieux dire l’innommable. A retenir.

Dès 8 ans
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Denunciada
Relais | Jul 24, 2014 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
16
Miembros
42
Popularidad
#357,757
Valoración
4.0
Reseñas
3
ISBNs
21
Idiomas
3