Product Details
City Noises

City Noises
By Karla Kuskin

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Product Description

In this great read-aloud with a buoyant urban beat, a little girl holds a tin cup up to her ear like a conch shell and hears crashing, calling, rushing, honking, and joking. Kuskin has composed an urban symphony full of the life and energy that gives a city its city sound. Flower's visually riotous illustrations will delight country and city kids. Full color.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2999151 in Books
  • Published on: 1994-09
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Kuskin ( City Dog ; The Philharmonic Gets Dressed ) and first-time illustrator Flower seize on urban cacophony and turn it into a celebration of life itself in this dynamic picture book. A girl discovers a tin can in the street and holds it up to her ear to hear the secrets it keeps: the roar of city life tumbles out, like a genie escaping from a lamp. With a few well-chosen words ("Squalling Calling Crashing Rushing") the noise level intensifies, matched by comically frenetic pictures in which every object (house, car, garbage can) is personified and given a manic expression. All is frenzied movement and color. In this carnival-like setting cars honk and belch; ships smoke; people joke, laugh and yell; trains squeal. Even the words "reds and greens" are an invitation for mayhem. Noise here is equated with "Living Living Living"--and certainly the book is a whirling, swirling, crazy, colorful ode to sound. There is much child appeal here in both text and artwork, although parents may be praying for peace and quiet after successive readings. Ages 4-8.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal
PreSchool-Grade 2-An exuberant explosion of colors and shapes illustrates this rhyming, energetic poem. A young girl holds a discarded tin can to her ear, and in conchlike fashion, the sounds of a busy city come pouring forth. Although the poem starts a bit awkwardly, it quickly becomes a delight to read with its palpable images of the crowded, exciting urban landscape. Purples, reds, golds, and greens dominate the (mainly) single-page, pop-art cartoons; bold black text appears under or to the side of each illustration. The vibrant pictures and catchy text make this an interesting and sophisticated read-aloud choice.
Mary Rinato Berman, New York Public Library
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Ages 3-5. In contrast to some other recent books on city noises, the narrative structure of this one is a slight peg on which pictures and rhymes hang. A little girl puts the side of a tin can to her ear and hears, not a roaring ocean, but city noises. She hears "running/wheeling" and "roaring/squealing," of course, but she also hears noises of a less-expected sort: "getting/giving" accompanies the picture of a woman handing fruit and sandwiches to a street dweller. Flower's artwork adds most of the excitement; its framed vistas, in Day-Glo tropical colors, are full of blunt edges and angles. There's too much going on here to make this good bedtime reading, but the book might be an interesting way to begin discussion of how pictures can show feelings and sounds as well as what people actually see before them. Mary Harris Veeder