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David Macaulay ~ Houghton Mifflin, 1985
Today, a return to the awesome 80s. I can remember when The Way Things Work came out... being blown away by the detail of the drawings and the explanations that made the most complex machines understandable and the most simple theories, extraordinary.
Later, when I was a children's bookseller, that book (along with D'Aulaire's Book of Greek Myths) made the art of the hand-sell a snap. Macaulay's first book, Cathedral -- published in 1977, was a revelation, depicting a Gothic cathedral with so much care and precision, it made the soul ache. He followed that up with titles like City, Pyramid and Castle, and even won a Caldecott Medal in 1990 for his work Black and White. Somewhere in the middle of all this genius, he published a perfect little picture book aptly entitled BAAA (with three As). Which is basically the story of the end of humankind as we know it, and how the sheep we left behind handled it.
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Soon they discover grocery stores and the warm glow of a TV full of static... then movies and clothes... Schools were established and bank accounts opened... leaders were born and a substitute food product was invented, Baaa. But as with the fall on mankind, sheep eventually fall victim to their own gluttony and humanity. With no sheep left to rule the earth...
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1 comment:
Cool. Reminds me of his other post-apocalyptic children's book: Motel of Mysteries.
http://www.powells.com/biblio/1-0395284252-2
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