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Book Cover for: What Do You Know?, Aracelis Girmay

What Do You Know?

Aracelis Girmay

What might a well, a bear, a farmer, an historian respond when Love asks, "What do you know?" This introspective and poetic picture book, created by sisters Aracelis Girmay and Ariana Fields, explores the acts of questioning and listening, shining a light on all of the wisdom these very different, yet interconnected, entities have to offer.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Enchanted Lion
  • Publish Date: Sep 7th, 2021
  • Pages: 56
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 11.50in - 9.53in - 0.55in - 1.20lb
  • EAN: 9781592703210
  • Recommended age: 05-UP
  • Categories: Diversity & MulticulturalConcepts - Senses & SensationPoetry (see also Stories in Verse)

About the Author

Fields, Ariana: - Ariana Fields is a graduate of SFAI (printmaking) and the City College Masters of Landscape Architecture program. She is interested in visual modes of storytelling, representations of movement, and works on paper (from drawings and printmaking to mapping and design). Ariana is currently working on garden design projects in Brooklyn and New York State. She is interested in root systems and the relationships between fungi and plants, and thinks of her work in spatial design as an extended study of adaptations that organisms and bodies make in our ever-changing environments. When she's not working on projects, she spends a lot of her time skating, surfing and climbing, and is interested in the movements inspired by those practices.
Girmay, Aracelis: -

Aracelis Girmay is a writer, teacher, aunt, and mother. She is the author of three books of poems and is the editor of How to Carry Water: Selected Poems of Lucille Clifton. For her work she has received the Whiting Award, the Isabella Gardner Award, and the GLCA New Writers Award. Her books have also been named finalists for the Connecticut Book Award, the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Hurston/Wright Award, and the Neustadt International Prize for Literature. Most recently, Girmay's poetry and essays have been published in The Paris Review, Granta, Black Renaissance Noire, and PEN America, among other publications. She is on the editorial board of the African Poetry Book Fund, and she lives and reads with her family in Brooklyn, New York.

Praise for this book

"Authors and sisters Girmay and Fields give voice to a variety of beings, imagining love itself asking, 'What do you know?' and listening carefully to the response... In softly tinted art with the feel of sketchbook pages, ... Fields draws as if setting down memories or dreams, with forms that repeat: people and birds with downcast gazes, bears with great claws, landscapes that undulate like ocean waves. Employing incantatory lines that conjure flame-like warmth and reverence, Girmay and Fields acknowledge the kind of knowing that's older than books."

-- "Publishers Weekly"

"[In] this lyrical exploration of the world, ... the musings are philosophical, ecological, poetic, and even sociological in nature... Many of these spreads let Mother Nature take the focus; humans (most are Black or brown skinned) are part of the land, not creatures who lord over it. Things even take a cosmological turn when readers hear from the Seven Sisters, who know 'the language of light.' Both text and art seem intentionally open-ended, leaving space for readers to extend meaning in their own ways, making it a fitting writing prompt for students (of all ages). Slightly muted, earth-toned illustrations feature flowing lines--from the multicolored furrows of a farmer's plowed field to the rays of light in a starry night sky--that compel page turns. A contemplative, enigmatic exploration of life on planet Earth."

-- "Kirkus Reviews"

"Author Aracelis Girmay and illustrator Ariana Fields, who are sisters, have created a sweeping, complex and mysterious vision of love in the picture book What Do You Know? Here, love is the protagonist who, in poetic and enigmatic text, wanders about asking questions of people, animals and even rocks... With soft lines and smudged colors, Ms. Fields's pictures have a dreamlike quality...What Do You Know? is an indirect mechanism for delivering love to readers ages 5-8, but with its varied scenes and characters, it fosters a sense of the wondrous width of the world and the connections between seemingly disparate things in it."

-- "Wall Street Journal"

"All love is an outstretched hand of curiosity reaching for knowledge--a tender acknowledgement of a reality that is not yourself and a lively interest in its interiority... That is what poet Aracelis Girmay and her artist sister Ariana Fields explore in What Do You Know? ... Page by page, love comes to the farmer and the seafarer, to the fruit bats and the honeybees, to the forest and the stars, asking each what they know, and their answers come simple and profound like a child's question... What emerges is a glowing sense that love is not something we do but something we are, something the world is, something vaster than space and older than time."

--Maria Popova "The Marginalian"

"Created by two sisters, this picture book... celebrates the wild diversity of life on earth but also the connection to wonder and mystery around us. The book is simple yet deeply profound, offering hope in darkness, the breath of whales and bears, and the magnificence of change even if it takes millennia. Happily, the writing doesn't rhyme, instead held together by the question and answer format. The writing is gentle and responsive, allowing each scenario to stand unique but also part of the whole. The art is bold and simple. It moves from layers of earth in the fields to lava flowing across the land to the immense eye of a whale at sea. It invites us to see the beauty in laundry on an urban line, the marvel of goats on cliffs, and the profound black of a starlit night. Gorgeous, deep and full of marvels."

-- "Waking Brain Cells"

"This is a truly beautiful picture book with text based on the last line of Sharon Olds amazing and haunting poem 'Looking at Them Asleep.' 'When love comes to me and says What do you know, I say This girl, this boy.' In What Do You Know?, Love comes to a honey bee, a farmer, a historian, volcanic ash, a rock and more, and asks the question. Each person or object gives a thoughtful and honest answer giving the reader a mini-lesson in patience, guidance, understanding, balance and joy."

-- "Youth Services Book Review"