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Building Manhattan

Building Manhattan
Author: Laura Vila
Publisher: Viking Juvenile
Category: Book

List Price: $16.99
Buy New: $6.80
You Save: $10.19 (60%)



New (36) Used (13) from $3.24

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 315606

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1st
Reading Level: Ages 4-8
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 40
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 10.8 x 8 x 0.4

ISBN: 0670062847
Dewey Decimal Number: 974.71
EAN: 9780670062843
ASIN: 0670062847

Publication Date: May 15, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: New - Has remainder mark. Fast shipping from trusted wholesaler with many exclusive publisher contracts.

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
A picture book for city lovers everywhere! Vibrant illustrations and a spare text come together in this striking picture book to tell the story of the building of Manhattan. There was a time when the city was little more than an undeveloped island. But as the small patch of land shifted from Native American to Dutch to English to American hands, it was built, layer on top of layer, into the bustling metropolis it is today.

With illustrations so detailed that one look just wont be enough, this book explores the citys many layers and shows theyre still visible, as long as you know where to look! A time line and bibliography are included.


Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Rutgers University Project on Economics and Children   August 15, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

At a time when climate change and global warming have entered public discourse as one of the biggest problems the world faces today, Building Manhattan comes as a welcome vehicle for teaching young children how all these problems started. The book takes the reader on a tour of the biological, social, and economic forces that have shaped Manhattan as we know it today.

Starting with about 50,000 years BCE, we see Manhattan as a thirteen-mile long island with tall grasses and woods that provided home to numerous small animals. Many years later, the Lenape people lived harmoniously with their natural environs, but as the Dutch and British inhabited the island, they quickly changed the landscape to suit their needs. Economic development brought ever higher buildings, residents and tourists from all over the world, thriving businesses in services and manufacturing, and a comprehensive infrastructure to support the economy. Laura Vila's colorful and imaginative illustrations bring these developments to life and show children some of the tradeoffs between modernization and environmental conservation.



4 out of 5 stars Take me back to Manhattan. Take me back to New York.   June 10, 2008
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

I think you'd be shocked if you saw the number of books out there about the history of Manhattan written with small children in mind. Here I sit at my reference desk in the heart of New York City, and when a parent comes up to me with this request my heart just plummets. What options do I have? Mind my races. There's How Little Lori Visited Times Square, but it's not really the most up-to-date title I could hand them. There's This is New York, but the same problem applies. Well what about all those picture books about the cool places to see IN New York? All well and good but when you stop and think of it, none of these books are really talking about the island's history. They're more about how cool the Statue of Liberty is, really. Finally Laura Vila, spotting a wide gaping gap in our nation's collections, has hurry scurried to the rescue with her colorful and eclectic "Building Manhattan". It may not be the be all and end all of NYC history picture book texts, but it's a darn good place to start.

Vila's look at the island contains a smooth narrative, uninterrupted by footnotes or factoids. "Long ago, before maps or words were used, a little island formed." Slowly the reader discovers the subsequent arrivals to the island. Animals came. Then the Lenape. After that the Dutch settled in and were followed by the English. New York became a colony and then a state. After that, immigrants came in waves. Technology allowed them to build enormous bridges, buildings and roads. Manhattan quickly became a center of tourism and the city continued to grow. "It grew and it grew and people still come. The building of Manhattan is never done." Backmatter includes a lovely little Time Line that offers two and three sentence facts on each section. There's even a small Bibliography of further sources where the author gleaned her facts about the city.

Vila's an excellent choice of illustrator for this kind of story because what she really excels in is overwhelming the senses. Any stray visitor to Times Square today could get a headache just standing in one place staring. New York's plethora of hype, energy, enthusiasm, and color needs an accompanying illustrator who understands and can synthesize its vibrant scream for attention. Something along the lines of Robert Neubecker's Wow! City! What's great about Vila is that right from the start she gets that. Even her peaceful scenes of greenery long before the arrival of the Europeans is a remarkable overlapping of circles, images, and landscapes. Her animals look reminiscent of Shaun Tan's The Rabbits (apropos when you consider that the island's invaders are just around the corner). Animals, as it turns out, are enormously prevalent in this book. From cats to rats to mice to dogs, Vila recognizes that humans have not been the only immigrants to this particular burg. You can always find some kind of tiny creature's head popping out of a cart or a pocket if you just look closely enough. In detail, Vila excels.

She isn't afraid of mixing up a person's perspective if it serves the story either. One minute you're looking down on a city scene. The next you're on the ground looking up as though through a fish-eye lens, the towers and people milling around in circles. The cover says it all, cleverly showing the history with the older sections of the city on the bottom and the newest, tallest towers at the top. And then there are the colors. They mix, they meld, they outline and define. Vila's use of yellows, reds, and blues are particularly prevalent, giving the city a bright open and airy feel. A person could easily stare at these images for hours and never grow tired of them.

New York is, above all else, a diverse community and so I do wish that I'd seen a bit more of that in the book. Vila mentions the Lenape in a two-page spread and then they disappear without another word. I didn't really want to see bloodshed in a picture book for the young, but maybe a quick mention of how the Dutch at least "took over" the land wouldn't have been out of place. And when it came to immigrants to New York I did want to see ethnicities represented other than just Europeans. The Great Migration of African-Americans from the South would have fit in nicely with the city's rise, for example. Her subsequent shots of New York residents are diverse, so that's good. I just get a little tired about teaching our kids about white people 24/7.

All in all, a splendid addition to any library's collection that requires a little more Manhattan history. Of course, a person might question how many people would actually want a history of Manhattan. It is just a single city in an otherwise pretty large country. But if you consider New York the gateway to America (and many do) then it stands to reason that a book relaying its history would and should exist somewhere for younger children. Inarguably beautiful, I would have tweaked it here and there, but there are certainly few books to compare it to.



5 out of 5 stars Learn About the Building of Manhattan!   May 21, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Building Manhattan, is a picture book about the history of the many cultures who came to Manhattan and what they built. It encompasses Manhattan's rich history from its conception as an island of natural beauty with diverse wildlife, to its contemporary diversity of cultures and architecture.

In writing and illustrating Manhattan's rich history, it was my goal to make history both exciting and accessible to young children. Along with the book I have created an enrichment program with educational activities focussed on helping teach children relate to history their own lives.


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