<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>When the world feels too big, loud, and busy, a young girl imagines a museum where she can organize little pieces of it and wonder about them.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><strong>Newbery Medalist Lynne Rae Perkins invites readers on an imagination-fueled journey through the living museum that surrounds us all. Luminous, in-the-moment, and full of wonder, <em>The Museum of Everything</em> inspires readers to slow down and appreciate the world. For fans of <em>What Do You Do with an Idea?, The Most Magnificent Thing, </em>and classics such<em> </em>as<em> Time of Wonder </em>and <em>A Hole Is to Dig. Illustrated with extraordinary dioramas and collages.</em></strong></p><p>When you feel that the world is too big and loud and busy and distracting, you can pretend that you're in a museum. It's quiet there, and you can wonder about everything: Is a rock in a puddle an island? Is a dry spot on the ground on a rainy day the shadow of a car that's just driven off? There's a museum for everything--for islands and shadows and clouds and trees, and so much more.</p><p>Newbery Medalist and acclaimed picture book creator Lynne Rae Perkins balances imagination and creativity with curiosity and facts. She has created the extraordinary artwork in three dimensions--as if each page is an exhibit or installation in a museum. A transcendent and timely picture book, <em> The Museum of Everything</em> encourages young readers to wonder, dream, and explore--and to learn more about the world around them.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"In this big, noisy world, a museum, even if it's only in one's imagination, is a place of quiet contemplation. With this absorbing and original picture book, Perkins offers a special sanctuary for curious and creative dreamers, a space to think about, explore, and possibly curate a few collections of their own. . . . A perfect lead-in to a museum visit or a STEAM-based contemplation titled the 'Museum of Things I Wonder About.'"--Horn Book <strong>(starred review)</strong><br><br>"[Perkins] elevates the ordinary--again--in this story about objects we simply do not really see: a fallen leaf, a cloud, a flower. . . Gives readers a sense that the microscopic and the telescoped can live side by side, or within one another. . . . Perkins connects with readers who daydream, validating that act as a way to see the world and learn of its many interlocking pieces, and makes imaginative mental musings into a story, and an artform. Pure fun."--School Library Journal <strong>(starred review)</strong><br><br>"An enticing spur to scientific philosophy and creative contemplation that echoes children's openness of thought, using accessible and specific detail that likely overlaps with youngsters' own metaphysical inquiries. . . . Perkins's familiar easygoing, grainy figures and landscapes set off the prominent museum items with a contrast that suits the textual concepts but never loses visual cohesion. . . . This will be a next step for youngsters whose imaginations have been tickled by Portis's <em>Now</em>, Underwood's <em>Outside In</em>, or just their own musings." --Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books <strong>(starred review)</strong><br><br>"Considering objects one by one and putting them 'in a quiet place' is also what museums do, a resemblance that the child notices . . . Ideas are developed with particular richness . . . Distinctive and heartfelt, the museum is observed with a poet's eye and an inventor's spirit."--<em>Publishers Weekly</em><br><br>"Perkins's great gifts for observation and connections are on display here as her narrator . . . serves as curator and tour guide for several 'museum exhibits' of concrete objects and abstract phenomena. . . . A small, idiosyncratic catalog of possibilities and a lens for seeing parts of the world in relation to one another. . . . There is plenty of room for readers to think about and celebrate their own ways of seeing, collecting, and cataloging the world--and to celebrate an endless variety of possible museum exhibits around them. Poetic, intriguing, and charming."--<em>Kirkus Reviews </em><strong>(starred review)</strong><br><br>"There are many fascinating museums in the world, but expand your definition of what you might hope to see in a single building and enter the Museum of Everything. . . . Gloriously inventive illustrations reflect the child's rich inner thoughts. . . . A marvel of creativity . . . Whatever causes you to pause, appreciate, contemplate, and enjoy--that's what belongs in your own Museum of Everything."--<em>Booklist </em><strong>(starred review)</strong><br>
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