Jon Klassen «The Dark»

Laszlo is afraid of the dark.

The dark lives in the same house as Laszlo. Mostly, though, the dark stays in the basement and doesn’t come into Lazslo’s room. But one night, it does.

This is the story of how Laszlo stops being afraid of the dark.

With emotional insight and poetic economy, two award-winning talents team up to conquer a universal childhood fear.

Jennifer Uman, Valerio Vidali «Jemmy Button»

Exchanged for the single mother-of-pearl button that gave him his nickname, an indigenous Tierra del Fuegan boy named Orundellico spent many years in England in the early 1800s as part of a failed experiment in forced civilization. Less a biography than an attempt to represent this alienating experience from Jemmy’s point of view, it is distinguished by lyrical prose-poetry («Come away with us and taste our language, see the lights of our world,» the British explorers tell Jemmy) and intensely creative and beautifully conceived paintings. On matte pages, Jemmy, a paper-doll figure with red ochre skin and curly black hair, walks naked through throngs of top-hatted and gowned silhouettes, all the same shade of blue. His guardians buy him clothes and take him to concerts, but the paintings show him always set apart from his companions. «Jemmy felt almost at home. Almost, but not quite.» As a snapshot of colonial betrayal, it evokes regret, longing, guilt, and awe—an assortment of feelings that might make the book more attractive to grownups than to children.

Виктор Воронцов «Айболит»

Шиворотов явился сразу почти гением. Вдруг в общежитии училища объявился симпатичный, кудрявый парень с насмешливым голосом, которым он беспрестанно говорил с поучительными нотками. Студентом не был, но хотел учиться рисовать. Сначала взял у меня несколько уроков, как у признанного училищного рисовальщика, но очень быстро стал рисовать так, что превратился в лидера нашего сообщества. (Олег Яхнин)