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a children's picture book publishing company

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Kirkus Starred Review for Monday Is Wash Day!

We are excited to share the Kirkus Starred Review for Monday Is Wash Day:

Two sisters help with the week’s laundry in an era when doing the wash required much more than the quick turn of a knob.

“First we work and then we play,” says their mother. With a sigh, the girls cheerfully begin. Young readers might initially blanch. The dark-haired, light-skinned girls sort heaps of dirty clothes, haul buckets of water to the back porch (hot for the washer, cold for the rinse tubs), dump in soap, feed dripping garments through a wringer, rub their numb hands, and then hang the entire load on a line to dry with pins. Quickly, a fascination, appreciation, and perhaps even envy for this laborious weekly task will bloom inside modern children’s Oxy-cleaned chests. The girls find jokes, teasing, and closeness in their work alongside Mama—and just ahead of their stumbling baby brother. Will he help with the wash when he grows bigger? Cut-paper collages, in the soft colors of beloved faded clothes, bring dated domestic scenes into engaging immediacy with their clever crinkles, folds, layers, and gentle pencil work. Such carefully snipped and assembled artwork (wrinkled shirts, pleated dresses, tiny tea pots) conjures the magic found in the tenuousness of a precious paper-doll chain.

A labor of love itself, this picture book delivers readers to an early time and leaves them feeling as warm and sun-kissed as a sheet fresh off the line.

tags: Reviews, Monday is Wash Day
Tuesday 07.05.16
Posted by RGP
 

Monday Is Wash Day Review: "A quiet reminder of the pleasures of a job well done."

We are pleased to share the Publishers Weekly review for Monday Is Wash Day! This beautiful story is written by MaryAnn Sundby and illustrated by Tess Blackham. It will be available in stores September 27!

A young unnamed narrator describes helping her mother and sister, Annie, with the family’s weekly laundry chores at a time when crank-operated wringers and clotheslines were integral to the process. “First we work and then we play” is the family’s motto, but this story, the first children’s book for both Sundby and Blackham, is mostly concerned with the former. In exacting detail, the girl describes how she and Annie gather soiled items from around their farmhouse (a green early-20th-century oven sits in the kitchen, primly patterned wallpapers and white wainscoting line the walls), fill the washer and rinse tubs, and help wash and dry the linens (“Sheets and towels on the outside line. Shirts and blouses on the middle line”). Washes of pale color, delicate pencil detailing, and cut-paper collage elements create an expansive and inviting domestic backdrop, as Blackham uses wrinkled paper to evoke rumpled fabric and white string for clotheslines and apron ties. Beyond offering a glimpse of bygone household routines, the story is a quiet reminder of the pleasures of a job well done.

tags: Reviews, Monday is Wash Day
Friday 07.01.16
Posted by RGP
 

How To Read A Wordless Picture Book

How to Read a Wordless Picture Book

Wordless, adjective: without using words. without speaking.

Working in the children’s picture book industry, we often hear, “oh, wordless? I don’t get wordless picture books because I don’t know how to read them to my child. I don’t know what to say.”  

“It’s wordless,” we reply. “You don’t have to say anything.”

A wordless picture book is an opportunity to engage your child in a story without having to read the given text. You can describe each page as you see it or you can have the child explain what they see. You can make up a story based on the illustrations or have the child make up a story. Even better, do it together!  But most importantly, you can sit and share a book.

Reading with your child is a time to share a moment with them. Both of you are going to learn from the book and from each other. With a wordless book, you can have a different experience every time you turn the page. Read the book in silence and each will see something different.

We are proud that Ripple Grove Press is releasing its first wordless picture book in spring of 2017: Graduation Day by Piotr Parda.

While there are many discussions and articles out there about wordless picture books, Piotr Parda and RGP thought it would be best to present the idea in another way: wordless! 

tags: Articles, Graduation Day
Monday 06.20.16
Posted by RGP
 

Happy Father's Day

May every dad out there get a hug today!

tags: Father's Day, Monday is Wash Day
Sunday 06.19.16
Posted by RGP
 

Graduation Day Book Trailer

Check out this amazing book trailer for Graduation Day by Piotr Parda. It is a wordless book showing a day in a life of a girl who takes the actions of others and grows something beautiful. This beautiful book comes out in spring 2017, just in time for graduations! 

tags: Graduation Day, Behind the scenes, Book Trailer
Tuesday 05.31.16
Posted by RGP
 

Behind the Scenes of Grandmother Thorn

Grandmother Thorn is going to be so gorgeous. Just look at these process shots from illustrator Rebecca Hahn. The colors and textures are so rich; this book is going to be a joy to pore over again and again! Coming in 2017; written by Katey Howes.

tags: Behind the scenes, Grandmother Thorn
Tuesday 05.24.16
Posted by RGP
Comments: 3
 

"Creating Picture Books" with Jami Gigot

Jami Gigot, author/illustrator of Mae and the Moon and the forthcoming Seb and the Sun (2018), recently had a guest column on the Writer's Digest blog. Check it out here to read about the creative process of making picture books.

tags: Mae and the Moon, Behind the scenes, Best Books
Monday 05.16.16
Posted by RGP
 

Mr. Tanner Sneak Peek

Artwork by Bryan Langdo

Artwork by Bryan Langdo

We're excited to share a sneak peek of Mr. Tanner, written by Harry Chapin, illustrated by Bryan Langdo. Coming in 2017.

tags: Mr. Tanner, Sneak Peek
Tuesday 05.10.16
Posted by RGP
Comments: 1
 

Happy Mother's Day

Ripple Grove Press would like to wish a Happy Mother's Day to all the amazing moms out there.

Artwork from The Gentleman Bat by Abraham Schroeder, illustrated by Piotr Parda

tags: The Gentleman Bat
Sunday 05.08.16
Posted by RGP
 

Too Many Tables Turns One!

April 28 makes the one year anniversary of the release of Too Many Tables by Abraham Schroeder and illustrated by Micah Monkey.

This hilarious story is a must read about what happens with restaurant owners realize they are missing a key ingredient for their opening day.

The premise is simple, silly, and unforgettably entertaining. Abraham Schroeder's second book is a delightful story that breaks from the carefully measured humor of his debut book, The Gentleman Bat. Micah Monkey' colorful and expressive drawings throw readers into a chaotic world filled with just too many tables! The comical story and bright visuals will keep readers thoroughly entertained as they revisit the book time and time again. 

But people with tables kept coming.

They brought short tables and tall tables,

coffee tables and patio tables,

foldng tables and foosball tables,

Ping-Pong tables and pool tables.

tags: Too Many Tables, The Gentleman Bat
Thursday 04.28.16
Posted by RGP
 
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