Carson Ellis is the author-illustrator of the New York Times bestseller Home, her debut solo picture book. She is also the illustrator of The Composer Is Dead by Lemony Snicket and Dillweed’s Revenge: A Deadly Dose of Magic by Florence Parry Heide, and she collaborated with her husband, Colin Meloy, on the best-selling Wildwood series. Carson Ellis lives with her family outside Portland, Oregon.
Carson Ellis has created a fantastic microcosm with her usual grace
and inventiveness...I was completely captivated by Ellis’s
wonderful creatures, their charming little world and their droll
language.
—The New York Times Book Review
Ellis (Home, 2015) elevates gibberish to an art form with her
brilliant account of a few bugs, who discover a green shoot
sprouting from the ground...Readers and pre-readers alike will find
myriad visual cues in Ellis’ splendid folk-style, gouache-and-ink
illustrations that will allow them to draw meaning from the
nonsensical dialogue, as well as observe the subtle changing of the
seasons. The entire story unfolds on the same small stretch of
ground, where each new detail is integral to the scene at hand.
Effortlessly working on many levels, Ellis’ newest is
outstanding.
—Booklist (starred review)
Viewers follow the unfurling of an exotic woodland plant through
the actions and invented language of beautifully coiffed and
clothed insects...This is certain to ignite readers' interest and
imaginings regarding their natural surroundings. Following the
minute changes as the pages turn is to watch growth,
transformation, death, and rebirth presented as enthralling
spectacle.
—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
In a wordless coda of successive double-page spreads we are
comforted by the cycle of the seasons. By the final words, “Du iz
tak?” we are fluent speakers of Bug. Completely scrivadelly, this
is a tour de force of original storytelling.
—Horn Book (starred review)
Ellis’s (Home) bewitching creation stars a lively company of
insects who speak a language unrelated to English, and working out
what they are saying is one of the story’s delights...Very gently,
Ellis suggests that humans have no idea what wonders are unfolding
at their feet—and that what takes place in the lives of insects is
not so different from their own. Has there ever been anything quite
like it? Ma nazoot.
—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
It’s a genuinely charming story with brain-tickling interest from
the dialogue, and it earns a satisfying edge from the silent and
decisive victory over the spider. Ellis is best known as an
illustrator, and her oversized gouache and ink spreads deftly
balance playfulness and precision, intricacy and airy
background...Readers-aloud will want a practice run to ensure their
intonation carries the meaning of the words, but it will all make
perfect and pleasing sense to imaginative listeners.
—Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books (starred review)
Using intricate illustrations supported by spare dialogue in an
invented language, Ellis elegantly weaves the tale of several
square feet of ground in the insect world as the seasons
pass...This is a title that calls for multiple readings, as there
is something new to be discovered each time. Perfect for one-on-one
or small group sharing.
—School Library Journal
High drama ensues in the clean, odd, beautiful pages ahead. A
marvel.
—Shelf Awareness for Readers
Ellis’ precise and detailed illustrations of bespectacled bugs and
an elaborate fort utterly beguile...It would be easy to make such a
story clever for the sake of being clever, but instead Ellis has
created one of the smartest, most original and most endearing
picture books of this year. Du iz tak? It’s a keeper is what it
is.
—BookPage
Sophisticated, curious, well-dressed bugs watch as a plant shoot
grows and blossoms into a magnificent flower. Their miniature world
is alluringly well-realized and includes an invented language,
which young readers delight in decoding.
—The Boston Globe
There’s an elusive yet distinctly joyful quality to Carson Ellis’s
picture book that feels like suspended glee, or a laugh caught
halfway in the throat. As in her 2015 debut, “Home,” the gouache
and ink illustrations in “Du Iz Tak?” are chic and subtly witty.
But this time Ms. Carson matches them with dialogue in the
enchanting foreign language of the elegantly dressed beetles and
insects that live on a small, eventful patch of earth.
—The Wall Street Journal
Written entirely in the playful and amusing language of bugs, it
isn't necessary to speak fluent moth or ladybug to enjoy the growth
and metamorphoses creatively combined through Carson Ellis's
delightful words and fanciful illustrations as the seasons subtly
transform.
—ForeWord Reviews
With minimal text and crisp images, Ellis's book is deceptively
simple, but don't be fooled; this whimsical story requires a close
reading to truly absorb all its subtle delights.
—Globe and Mail
Here's a bright, refined fantasy world to be lost in, and one that
has its dark, seasonal drama to boot. Good for kids who like to
imagine miniature worlds.
—Toronto Star
A bold retro color palette and lots of white space allow a big
beautiful story plenty of room to breathe.
—Chicago Tribune
A discerning eye and ear are prerequisites for decoding this
elegantly esoteric concoction, and they are outcomes, too.
—San Francisco Chronicle
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