Julie Paschkis was born in Pennsylvania and attended Germantown Friends School, Ringerike Folkehogskole in Norway, Cornell University and the School for American Craftsmen at RIT. She taught art to grade school children for about 8 years. During that time she continued to work on her own art and illustration. In 1991 she stopped teaching to commit herself to doing art full time. That art includes painting, illustration, and illustrating children's books. All of it is connected to storytelling. Julie has published nearly 25 children's picture books, including a much acclaimed one about the poet Pablo Neruda. The Wordy Book is a book of gorgeous word painting on which Julie has worked for many years. It celebrates the imagination and the playful expressiveness, the sheer richness and beauty of language. Julie lives in Seattle, WA with her family and community.
A Publishers Weekly High-Concept Picture Book for ChildrenSelected
for 2021 Society of Illustrators Original Art Exhibition"Some
children’s books feel like classics the first time one encounters
them. ‘What does a word think about?’ the artist and writer Julie
Paschkis asks on the first double-page spread of The Wordy Book.
This and other evocative questions… punctuate a dazzling array of
richly colored, riveting paintings. Folkloric and elegant, this
book invites slow, meditative drifting. Paschkis is the illustrator
of more than 25 children’s books, and her poetic sensibility girds
every page. Absorbing layers of waves, leaves and petals, boats,
birds and people, all threaded with words, sustain the magic of her
visual language. The whole head full of ‘maybe,’ with the word
‘yes’ repeating inside a smaller head, is a miracle of whimsy and
wonder. An engaging author’s note reminds us that ‘a word can be
savored for its sound and shape as well as for its meaning’ and
that ‘the meaning can be fluid.’ It’s not hard to imagine young
poets embracing The Wordy Book as warmly as new generations keep
embracing The Little Prince."
*The New York Times*
STARRED REVIEW! ? "Talk about painting with words.
Author/illustrator Paschkis plays with them, too, and encourages
readers to do likewise. In the process, she explores the elasticity
and seemingly endless possibilities of language. The vividly
colored, wittily detailed, folk-style paintings on double-page
spreads organically incorporate words into the artwork in wondrous,
creative ways... The book makes a great springboard for
creative-thinking activities in writing and art units in classroom
and library programs... In a word, a feast for the eyes, brain, and
artistic imagination."
*Kirkus*
There is an Alice in Wonderland quality to the book: The questions
play with the limits of logic (What tells me more, an IF or an OR?)
and with the existential restlessness of childhood (When does there
become here? When does then become now?); they invite the
fundamental curiosity at the heart of compassion (Do you see what I
see?) and emanate a radiant love of life (What is the sum of a
summer day?) consonant with the vitality of Paschkis’s paintings —
this parallel language of shape and color just as rich and eloquent
as the language of words, as playful and abstract as the language
of mathematics.
*The Marginalian*
“Words are the subject of this reverie by Paschkis, who
incorporates them into striking, dreamlike folk-art. In rhythmic
compositions that feature birds, mammals, and humans wearing
intricately patterned clothing in shades of blue, fresh greens,
deep fuchsia, and dramatic black, areas of color are paved with
small tiles, each one emblazoned with its own hand-lettered word…
Questions lead only to more questions in this mesmerizing
exploration of sound, form, and color. Back matter features an
author’s note.”
*Publishers Weekly*
Devoted to the tricks and beauties of the English language, The
Wordy Book, by Julie Paschkis, has lush illustrations and an
enigmatic text that would be useful for sparking conversation at
bedtime with anyone over perhaps the age of 4 or 5. 'When does
there become here?' Ms. Paschkis asks. 'What tells me more—an if or
an or?' These posers are accompanied by richly colored folkloric
pictures, many with words woven into their patterns. The question
'Do you see what I see?' runs beside a painting of a white vase—or
is it the space between two silhouetted faces?—with flowers whose
petals and leaves are decorated with words such as
'happy/sappy/zippy' and 'worry/flurry/fury.' The strangeness is
part of the beauty; the beauty is in the strangeness.
*Wall Street Journal*
“With tree trunks whose bark is layer on layer of sinewy words,
with landscapes that curve and coax along with playful energy about
sounds and meanings, and with a sensibility that is part New Age
and all childlike, Paschkis winds her way through paintings that
ask questions and questions that point to many answers. The art is
folkloric, with colorful birds, animals, and people, but also
surreal in the compositions, which provide readers with plenty to
consider… This book asks a lot but has perfect appeal for the
dreamy child who loves to be immersed in both words and
pictures.”
*School Library Journal*
“This mesmerizing, exquisitely designed book includes new paintings
as well as a collection of paintings that Paschkis, one of my
favorite illustrators, has created over the years… She pairs these
paintings with thought-provoking questions, some more mysterious
(‘When does the end turn into a beginning?’) than others (‘Could
you please repeat that?’). Delightfully, each painting bursts with
words: They beg the reader to slow down and linger. They remark
upon the artwork, and the artwork extends their meaning. They
nudge, interrogate, and provoke. Pay close attention to what many
of these words are doing. In the final spread, Paschkis asking
readers when the end becomes a beginning, word pairs are closely
related in the way the question suggests: ‘Poem / Ember.’ ‘Swoop /
Open.’ ‘Swivel / Velvet.’ In each spread, you can see for yourself
some of the vibrant palette and expert compositions. This one is a
beauty. It possesses a playfulness and vitality that is all its
own. It’s one for sharing—and revisiting often.”
*Seven Impossible Things*
“This gorgeously illustrated book is full of words waiting to be
discovered! Snuggle up and get ready to spend hours reading and
re-reading this dreamy, mesmerizing book, where art and literature
go hand in hand.”
*Fountain Bookstore (Richmond, VA)*
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