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Little Star

por Antonin Louchard

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A tiny red starfish dreams of leaving its ocean home and traveling up into the night sky to shine among the celestial stars.
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Antonin Louchard is the author and illustrator of wordless picture book 'Lttle Star'. The setting is pretty clear thanks to the art of the first two page spreads. An achored ship by a light house, where under the water there is a starfish close by the aanchor. I like how Louchard shows a water current sweep up the anchor. This shows that that current was strong enough to lift the starfish upwards to the surface of the sea where it is caught by waves and floated to a beach. The starfish is found by a child who places the starfish on their hair when a seagull swoops downa nd santches the starfish. This is where Louchard lost me, as the seagull flies out in to space. The space part did not seem random; i actually enjoyed the change of pace. What did confuse me was that the seagull left the star out in space amongst other stars. Then the shooting star falls back to earth into the ocean next to the ship's anchor. After looking the book over a couple more times I still did not understand the plot. Then I found a poem Louchard added on a page before the story starts. It seems this poem by Hubert Michel is the inpiration for Louchard's picture book. The poem made the story have more sense to it. I know wordless picture books are supposed to be open in how we see it, but it jutst left me confused. I am sure there are others who will get something out of the star's adventure. But personally, I think having to read the inspiration of a wordless picture book defeats the purpose of getting the story across. ( )
  Jtreed | Mar 7, 2016 |
This is a nice book, it was all pictures. The picture tell the story of a red starfish that gets swept up to shore. A little girl finds the star on the beach and put it in her hair. A bird sees it and snatches the star and brings it up in space as a star. The star shoots itself back down back into the water.
This is great to use when students need to help tell the story. ( )
  TamaraSmith | Apr 26, 2013 |
A wordless book of a star that is traveling fromt the bottom of the sea, to the top of the ocean, in a girl's arms, in a pelicans mouth then up in the night sky. it then travels back down to the bottom of the sea. This is a great book for a chld to use their imagination to tell what happens to the star. ( )
  Kcarline143 | Apr 26, 2012 |
This is a wordless book that describes a star going from the bottom of the sea to the ocean to space. The star is eventaully back in the same place it started. I think the illustrations are nice, but to say it a wordless book I think I would have wanted more to happen to the star to make the story more intersting. You think kids would like to look at the pictures and guess what's happening and make up their own story. ( )
  HopeMiller123 | Feb 19, 2012 |
I adore this book. The wordless format makes it perfect for beginning readers but the ideas and illustrations are rich enough to delight much older readers. It would be a perfect launching pad for students to write their own stories. ( )
  corydickason | Aug 11, 2010 |
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A tiny red starfish dreams of leaving its ocean home and traveling up into the night sky to shine among the celestial stars.

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