Love -- Juvenile fiction. |
Parent and child -- Juvenile fiction. |
Available:*
Library | Material Type | Call Number | Status |
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Searching... A C Bilbrew Library | Picture Book | EB KUO | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Agoura Hills Library | Book | EB KUO | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Anthony Quinn Library | Picture Book | EB KUO | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Culver City Julian Dixon Library | Picture Book | EB KUO | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Florence Library | Picture Book | EB KUO | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Lake Los Angeles Library | Picture Book | EB KUO | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Los Nietos Library | Picture Book | EB KUO | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Rosemead Library | Picture Book | EB KUO | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Sunkist Library | Picture Book | EB KUO | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... View Park Bebe Moore Campbell Library | Picture Book | EB KUO | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Walnut Library | Picture Book | EB KUO | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Willowbrook Library | Picture Book | EB KUO | Searching... Unknown |
Bound With These Titles
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Summary
Summary
Let's Do Everything and Nothing is a lush and lyrical picture book from Julia Kuo celebrating special moments--big and small--shared with a child.
Will you climb a hill with me?
Dive into a lake with me?
Reach the starry sky with me,
and watch the clouds parade?
Love can feel as vast as a sky full of breathtaking clouds or as gentle as a sparkling, starlit night. It can scale the tallest mountains and reach the deepest depths of the sea.
Standing side by side with someone you love, the unimaginable can seem achievable.
But not every magical moment is extraordinary. Simply being together is the best journey of all.
Reviews: (3)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Togetherness is at the heart of this serene book by Kuo, making her solo debut. Framed by a series of single-sentence invitations ("Will you climb a hill with me?") and stated plans ("We'll follow trails on summer nights"), the book pictures an adult and child, cued as of Taiwanese heritage, together experiencing the mundane and the adventurous. Kuo's distinctive digital illustrations, both delicate and bold, pop off the page, relying on a rich palette of coral, cornflower blue, and marigold hues. At first composed of lofty scenes that see the pair ascending a snowy summit and swimming among stingray-filled ocean depths, the story eventually turns domestic, foregrounding bath time and snacks including tea, oranges, and a bag of shrimp chips. As the companions "watch the shadows stretch," and comfortably "do everything and nothing," they enjoy each other's company with a resounding and loving intimacy. Ages 3--6. (Mar.)
Kirkus Review
A mother and her young daughter, cued as Taiwanese American, explore the world together. The two climb a snowy mountain, swim with manta rays in the ocean, stargaze, "follow trails on summer nights," lie in a field to watch cloud parades of "majestic beasts," and more. Readers will decide whether these remarkable adventures are real or metaphors for the imaginative worlds mother and daughter explore while spending the day together indoors. The duo's excursions end with the peaceful rituals of bathtime and teatime, as they "watch the shadows stretch" then doze on the rug. With just a single picturesque sentence per double-page spread, Kuo creates a sweeping yet intimate narrative about the experiences of contentment and togetherness that make even small moments seem extraordinary and that anchor us through life's highs and lows. This connectedness, the book suggests, helps us "reach the very top, the very bottom, the very end" of life's journeys as we "do everything and nothing" together. The tranquil digital illustrations use a three-tone or four-tone palette with striking color contrasts and sometimes recall Japanese Ukiyo-e landscape art (Kuo is Taiwanese American.) Visual details like a bag of shrimp chips, Chinese calligraphy, and a Zhongguo knot add cultural authenticity. This offering would make a wonderful gift book for expectant parents and may inspire young readers with new ideas for outdoor activities. (This book was reviewed digitally.) A quiet book with a loud message about the everyday things that create constancy in a world of ephemeral pleasures. (Picture book. 4-7) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Taiwanese American illustrator Kuo makes her authorial debut with this quiet yet expansive story celebrating the bond between a mother and daughter. The pair embark on a series of imaginative quests at all sorts of altitudes throughout the natural world. They explore the deep ocean's majestic sights while swimming with huge manta rays. They observe the enchantments in a summer's night surrounded by fireflies. They spot animal shapes in the sky as they relax on the ground and journey to the highest snowy peak above the clouds. After their grand adventures, the story winds up back at home, with the pair gazing out a window, relaxing with tea, and taking a bath--enjoying each other's company is clearly "the best journey yet." Kuo's warm scenes in sunset colors match the close, cozy tone of the story, and the expansiveness of the landscapes emphasizes the sense of possibility in the pair's imaginative adventures, which can also be interpreted as metaphors for life's journeys. Perfect for a Mother's Day display or storytime.