![]() ![]() ![]() –Luann Toth, School Library Journal This review was published in School Library Journal’ s September 2015 issue. VERDICT An enchanting glimpse of a dancer whose name has come to be synonymous with her most famous role. ![]() Even her illness and death are presented in a dramatic, theatrical manner-fitting somehow for someone who lived and breathed the stage. Swan: The Life and Dance of Anna Pavlova Laurel Snyder, Julie Morstad (Illustrator) 4.33 1,545 ratings341 reviews Want to read Kindle 8.99 Rate this book The world is big. On nearly every page, the lithe and lovely figure of Pavlova appears, usually in motion, always the embodiment of beauty and grace. For example, when the curtain rises on Pavlova: “She steps onto the stage alone…/and sprouts white wings, a swan./She weaves the notes, the very air/into a story…/Anna is a bird in flight,/a whim of wind and water./Quiet feathers in a big loud world./Anna is the swan.” Morstad’s artwork-done in ink, gouache, graphite, pencil, and crayon-is stylized and understated, with backdrops that suggest stage sets more than landscapes or domestic scenes. The spare, lyrical text instead offers imagery that is more poetic than concrete. Pavlova’s humble beginnings and early life in 19th-century tsarist Russia are merely hinted at, though spelled out more fully in an appended author’s note. Gr 1-4–This tall, graceful picture book captures the artistic spirit, if not the entire biography, of one of the world’s prima ballerinas. Swan: The Life and Dance of Anna Pavlova. ![]()
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