Dan Bar-el is a children's author, educator and storyteller. His work includes a series of satirical chapter books including Pussycat, Pussycat, Where Have You Been?, Things Are Looking Grimm, Jill (winner of the 2008 Silver Birch Express award) as well as two funny picture books including Alphabetter (chosen by the BC government for the Ready, Set, Learn program - 50,000 copies sent to preschool children across the province) and Such a Prince (a 2009 Blue Spruce Honour Book). In the past, Dan trained and worked professionally as an actor, has written for theatre, as well as written and performed comedy across Canada. He has many years experience working with school age children and currently facilitates a unique storytelling program that he brings to preschools and daycares. Dan merrily travels around the country visiting schools and libraries, and when he's not doing that, he lives and thrives in Vancouver along with the most adorable kitten in the known universe. Learn dubious facts about him on the web at www.danbar-el.com.
Kirsti Anne Wakelin is a well-known freelance designer, writer and illustrator. She lives in Vancouver, BC.
Reviews for Pussycat, Pussycat, Where Have You Been? also by Dan
Bar-el ""Unbeknownst to many Mother Goose readers, a number of
classic rhymes continue way past their well-known opening stanzas
("Old Mother Hubbard" is a particularly fine example), but here,
Bar-el creates his own extension of the initial London rendezvous
in "Pussycat, Pussycat." Traveling onward to Paris and Australia
and over the midnight seas, the pussycat adventures through
imaginative Chagall-style acrylic paintings. "Pussycat, Pussycat,
will you stay home? / I always get restless, I always will roam."
Take that, lazy cats."" - New York Times
""A tour de force that is sure to become a classic."" - Quill and
Quire, Starred Review ""Readers familiar with the original classic
Mother Goose rhyme are in for a real treat with a wonderful
revamping."" - CM Magazine ""Dan Bar-el has taken Pussycat from the
traditional rhyme far beyond London and the Queen's chair in a
delightful romp around the world. The rich language is embellished
with the beautiful and equally rich illustrations by Rae Mate."" -
Resource Links Review, Excellent Rating ""Dan Bar-el's creative
extension of the Mother Goose rhyme is a lyrical journey perfectly
accompanied by Rae Maté's dreamy paintings."" - Canadian Children's
Book News Reviews for Looking for Loons ""Kirsti Anne Wakelin's
warm illustrations complement Lloyd's imagery, and her sketchbook
like endpapers are a real treat." - Scholastic book review
""Luminous watercolors are an excellent match for the natural
beauty of the tale's setting . . . a very attractive and
well-designed book"" - Quill & Quire ""Looking for Loons perfectly
distills the magic of an early autumn cottage porch, watching the
world wake up. Silence disturbed only by lake animals, coolness in
the air before the day's heat starts up, it's a wonderful
hold-your-breath instant that seems to stretch while dew drips off
the branches, and inside, bacon sizzles. Local artist Kirsti Anne
Wakelin's exquisite watercolours span every shade of fall's
palette, with delicate tableaux of stillness and possibility."" -
Georgia Straight
CTTC Recommended Read 2014 Deakin Review of Children's Litearture:
This is a gorgeously illustrated book which offers readers the
opportunity to "float" in a dream boat, travelling deep into the
richly-embroidered dreams of children from different lands and
varying traditions. Starred review, Quill & Quire, April issue
"I don't have naps. I have adventures. I don't sleep in a bed. I
ride in a Dream Boat." So begins Vancouver author Dan Bar-el's
delicious journey into the reveries of children all over the
world.
Marco is whisked away in a boat made of reeds to the Andes, where
the stars guide him to his grandparents' village for dancing and
feasting. Kaia's cedar canoe flies her to Haida Gwaii for a
potlatch, while Ivan's mighty frigate sails past the Bear Spirits
to the realm of Baba Yaga and the Firebird. From Babatunde gliding
along the waters of the Niger to Shenaz in her fishing boat being
sprinkled with spray from Giant Ganesh's trunk, these children all
have their own vessels that take them away to lands of myth and
memory.
This is a gorgeous bedtime book. Bar-el's poetic prose sweeps the
reader along on the swish of the water and the wind that vaults the
boats aloft. The vignettes about each child are interspersed with
pages in which children representing diverse cultures meet and play
together in the air.
Kirsti Anne Wakelin's rich, multi-layered illustrations convey both
the spirit of adventure and the children's sleepiness. Whisking the
reader between cultures and across boundaries of night and day,
earth and air, reality and fantasy, the pictures embody the
interweaving of the children's stories. Words and pictures float
together and, like the Dream Boats, "dock gently." - Joanne Findon
Lemon Squash Bookclub -
"Where do children go when they close their eyes to sleep?
They step onto their dreamboats and sail toward adventure.
From Maiqui in the Andes floating through the constellations, to
Aljuu paddling along the shores of Haida Gwaii with Eagle, Orca and
Black Bear, to Ivan sailing into St. Petersburg, then sneaking
between the bony legs of Baba Yaga, stories and memories lead them
on.
Dream Boats takes readers into the dreams of children around the
world, dreams that are filled with family and legends, culture and
love. Written in lyrical prose by Dan Bar-el with gorgeous art by
Kirsti Anne Wakelin, this is a book to be treasured by generations
of dreamers.
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