Will have kids mesmerized from the get-go .
An Aldana Libros Book, Greystone Kids.
Stunning black and white illustrations of life during the Pleistocene.
Afterward, Everything was Different features: Backmatter explaining what we know--and don\'t know--about cave drawings.
And we can believe that she feels the absolute necessity to draw what she has seen and to tell stories.
In this book of few words, we follow a young girl who notices Everything that happens around her as her people search for a cave to shelter for the winter.
They are great art.
They aren\'t just scratches on the wall.
But when we look at these pictures, we can\'t help but admire the extraordinary talent of the first artists.
We don\'t know their purpose, though in some cases, evidence seems to suggest they were used for storytelling.
Some pictures are of humans, usually drawn as stick figures, but most are of animals.
And a bit later, they carved images onto stones.
As far back as 40,000 years ago (and maybe even earlier) people began drawing pictures on cave walls.
Once upon a time, during the Pleistocene, somewhere between two-and-a-half million and ten thousand years ago, small groups of people traveled their known world, hunting for food, seeking shelter, and slowly becoming more like the people we are today.
This almost wordless picture book set in the dawn of human life imagines how art and storytelling were born from the power of one young girl\'s observation. -- Kirkus STARRED Review from the creators of Drawing Outdoors , which was praised as full of wonder ( Kirkus STARRED Review) and a fanciful intermingling of art, science and nature ( New York Times ).
A stirring and thought-provoking reflection on the essential part stories play in making us human. . .
Gorgeously illustrated . . .
Will have kids mesmerized from the get-go