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Duck, Death and the Tulip - by Wolf Erlbruch (Hardcover)

Duck, Death and the Tulip - by  Wolf Erlbruch (Hardcover)
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Last Price: 12.39 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>A duck strikes up an unlikely friendship with Death.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><strong>From award-winning author and illustrator, Wolf Erlbruch, comes one of the world's best children's books about grief and loss. <br /> </strong><br /> In a curiously heart-warming and elegantly illustrated story, a duck strikes up an unlikely friendship with Death. Duck and Death play together and discuss big questions. Death, dressed in a dressing gown and slippers, is sympathetic and kind and will be duck's companion until the end. <br /> <br /> <em>"I'm cold," she said one evening. "Will you warm me a little?"<br /> Snowflakes drifted down.<br /> Something had happened. Death looked at the duck.<br /> She'd stopped breathing. She lay quite still.<br /> </em></p> <p>Explaining the topic of death in a way that is honest, lightly philosophical and with gentle humor, this enchanting book has been translated into multiple languages, adapted into an animated movie and short film and performed on stages worldwide.<br /> <br /> Wolf Erlbruch received the Hans Christian Andersen Medal in 2006 and was the winner of the Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award in 2017.</p> <ul> <li>Tender and direct, this is an excellent tool for helping to explain and talk about death, dying and bereavement with children</li> <li>Loved by adults and children, parents and grandparents, also suitable for schools, grief centers and counsellors</li> </ul> <p>Praise for <em>Duck, Death and the Tulip<br /> </em><br /> "The gold standard of picture books about death is <em>Duck, Death and the Tulip</em>...It's hard to describe how this extraordinarily tender book manages to be both heartbreaking and comforting, but it does.--<em>The New York Times</em><br /> <br /> The most extraordinary picture book I've seen in many a year. A duck becomes friends with Death, and it's the most natural thing in the world. Trust me, adults get far more weirded out by this book than children ever do. Amazing.--Patrick Ness, <em>Time Out London</em><br /> <br /> The most moving book I've read this year is the German picture book <em>Duck, Death and The Tulip </em>by Wolf Erlbruch, about the strange, uneasy friendship.--Meg Rosoff, <em>The Financial Times</em><br /> <br /> "The German children's book author and illustrator Wolf Erlbruch offers a wonderfully warm and assuring answer in <em>Duck, Death and the Tulip </em>- a marvelous addition to the handful of intelligent and imaginative children's books about death and loss."--Maria Popova, <em>Brainpickings<br /> </em><br /> "<em>Duck, Death and the Tulip </em>by Wolf Erlbruch is a superb picture book from Germany, that tells a gentle story of the relationship between Death and a duck. Death is portrayed as a sympathetic figure in a dressing gown who is with us all the time, but who only comes into Duck's consciousness towards the end of his life. It is warm, poignant and witty."--Anthony Browne, <em>The Guardian</em></p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p><strong>For me, the gold standard of picture books about death is 'Duck, Death and the Tulip, ' by Wolf Erlbruch. </strong>Duck meets Death, and she's horrified to realize he's been with her all along, waiting. It's hard to describe how this extraordinarily tender book manages to be both heartbreaking and comforting, but it does.--Sophie Blackall for <em>The New York Times Book Review</em></p>-- "Newspaper" (4/27/2018 12:00:00 AM)<br><br><p>Hans Christian Andersen Medalist Erlbruch imagines Death in a long plaid coat, carrying a black tulip. When Death materializes behind Duck one summer's day, she is stricken. 'You've come to fetch me?' But it's not time for Duck to die yet, and the two spend the summer together. Duck drapes herself over Death when he gets a chill ('Nobody had ever offered to do that for Death'), and Death offers Duck some end-of-life pointers (when Duck worries about missing her pond, Death says, 'When you're dead, the pond will be gone, too--at least for you'). Duck is impossibly tall and skinny, with eyes that widen like saucers when she's alarmed or angry. With the onset of autumn, Duck's eyes close forever, and Death sends her down the river, the tulip on her breast. Erlbruch's tale is full of unsettling contrasts. Death's menace is tempered by Duck's gentle, loopy presence; the sorrow of her end is eased by the memory of their friendship. <strong>Erlbruch does not offer readers explanation or comfort; instead, he uses his considerable artistic power to probe death's mystery.</strong> --<em>Publishers Weekly</em></p>-- "Journal" (10/10/2011 12:00:00 AM)<br><br><p>Parents who choose to discuss death with their young children may feel this odd import is an excellent discussion starter (if they don't find it peculiar and macabre). Duck is going about her daily activities when she notices the presence of Death. Personified as a miniature Grim Reaper, complete with long robe and grinning skull, Death initially frightens Duck, who wonders if Death has come to 'fetch' her. The (not so) reassuring response? 'Oh, I've been close by all your life--just in case.' Eventually Death seems so familiar that Duck even reaches out to warm him after a dip in the pond. Touched but undeterred, Death waits patiently until one day Duck succumbs, whereupon he launches her (and the titular tulip) out upon the 'great river.' <strong>Erlbruch's text, in Chidgey's translation, offers plenty to talk about, with touches of gentle humor as well as some briskly summarized views of the afterlife. His illustrations likewise repay careful attention despite their apparent simplicity. Created primarily in subdued shades, they appear to incorporate drawing, painting, etching and collage, and they deftly convey both action and personality with a few lines. Adults looking for a unique, thoughtful perspective on a serious subject should definitely consider this</strong><strong>--but be sure to preview it before sharing.</strong> --<em>Kirkus Reviews</em></p>-- "Journal" (10/15/2011 12:00:00 AM)<br><br><p>When Duck finally notices that she is being followed by Death, she becomes frightened and inquisitive. Death patiently answers her questions, and the two speculate about the great beyond. What follows is the construct of a unique sort of friendship. However, this is not a book about friendship; it is a book about life's most pitiless inevitability. Eventually Duck feels the chill of a cool wind for the first time and, lying quite still, stops breathing. Death tenderly strokes her feathers, carries her to the great river, and gently sends her on her way. This book tackles a difficult subject with eloquent, yet unapologetic candor. The subject matter may frighten small children, and adults likely will take pause at the bluntness, but the story is heartwarming and incontrovertibly portrays Death with a compassionate personification. <strong>The surrealistic yet modest synthesis of collage and drawings is true to the simple elegance and poignancy of the text.</strong> --<em>School Library Journal</em></p>-- "Journal" (10/1/2011 12:00:00 AM)<br>

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Cheapest price in the interval: 12.39 on November 8, 2021

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