Book Cover

There Was a Party for Langston: (Caldecott Honor & Coretta Scott King Illustrator Honor)

Contributor(s): Reynolds, Jason (Author), Pumphrey, Jerome (Illustrator), Pumphrey, Jarrett (Illustrator)

ISBN: 9781534439443

Publisher: Atheneum Books

Hardcover
$18.99
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Pub Date: October 3, 2023

Dewey: E

LCCN: 2022058007

Lexile Code: 0640

Features: Illustrated, Price on Product

Target Age Group: 04 to 08

Physical Info: 0.60" H x 11.60" L x 9.80" W ( 1.25 lbs) 56 pages

Accelerated Reader® Info

Quiz #:0000522465 ( There Was a Party for Langston: (Caldecott Honor & Coretta Scott King Illustrator Honor))

Reading level: 4.40

Interest level: LG

Point value: 0.5

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: A celebration of Langston Hughes and African American authors he inspired, told through the lens of the party held at the New York Public Library's Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in 1991.

Brief description: Jerome Pumphrey is a designer, illustrator, and writer. His work includes It's a Sign!, Somewhere in the Bayou, The Old Boat, and The Old Truck, which received seven starred reviews, was named a Best Book of the Year by Publishers Weekly, and received the Ezra Jack Keats Writer Award Honor--all of which he created with his brother Jarrett. They also illustrated Jason Reynolds's There Was a Party for Langston, which received a Caldecott Honor and a Coretta Scott King Illustrator Honor. Jerome works as a graphic designer at The Walt Disney Company. He lives in Texas.

Review Quotes: *Inspired by a photo of Maya Angelou and Amiri Baraka boogeying down at a 1991 gathering at the New York Public Library's Schomburg Center, this high-stepping shoutout to the honoree of that historic "hoopla in Harlem" pays tribute to the "king of letters," celebrating the man "who wrote Maya and Amiri into the world" with his "wake-up stories / and rise-and-shine rhymes," who answered would-be "word breakers" and book burners with courage and laughter. In illustrations as rhythmic and exuberant as Reynolds' narrative, Langston and the other two luminaries may occupy center stage (their bodies ingeniously constructed from words and the brushed letters of their names), but the entire alphabetically arranged lineup of guests looking on from the bookshelves are familiar names--from Ashley Bryan to Zora Neale Hurston, Toni Morrison to Octavia Butler, Countee Cullen to Nikki Giovanni to Gwendolyn Brooks. Evocative and celebratory words float around the dancers like strains of music, all the way to a culminating whirl of letters, laughter, and joy. Who knew these esteemed literary lions could cut the rug like that? --Booklist, *STARRED REVIEW* "08/01/2023"

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