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Smoky night
    Bunting, Eve, 1928-
Publisher: Harcourt Brace,
Pub date: 1994.
Pages: 1 v. (unpaged) :
ISBN: 0152699546
Item info: 27 copies checked in at Warren - Arthur Miller Branch, Armada Free Public Library, Chesterfield Township Library, Center Line Public Library, Eastpointe Memorial Library, Fraser Public Library, Harper Woods Public Library, Lenox Township Library, Lois Wagner Memorial Library, Mt. Clemens Public Library, MacDonald Public Library, Romeo Graubner Library, Romeo Kezar Branch Library, Roseville Public Library, Shelby Township Library, St. Clair Shores Public Library, Sterling Heights Public Library, Utica Public Library, Warren - Dorothy Busch Branch, and Warren - Civic Center Branch.
Holdings
Warren - Arthur Miller Branch Copies Material Location
E BUNT 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Armada Free Public Library Copies Material Location
JE BUNTING 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Chesterfield Township Library Copies Material Location
EASY BUN 1 Book-21 day loan Youth Services
Center Line Public Library Copies Material Location
E BUN CAL 1 Book-21 day loan Material has been checked out
  1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
E BUN CAL 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Eastpointe Memorial Library Copies Material Location
E FIC B 1 Book-21 day loan Youth Services
Fraser Public Library Copies Material Location
J EASY BUNTING 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Harper Woods Public Library Copies Material Location
PICTURE BOOK B 1 Book - Juvenile Juvenile
Lenox Township Library Copies Material Location
E BUN 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Lois Wagner Memorial Library Copies Material Location
E B 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
MacDonald Public Library Copies Material Location
JE BUNTING 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Mt. Clemens Public Library Copies Material Location
E BUNTING 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
  1 Book-21 day loan Work Room
Romeo Graubner Library Copies Material Location
JE BUNTING 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Romeo Kezar Branch Library Copies Material Location
E FIC BUNTING 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Roseville Public Library Copies Material Location
E BUNTING 1 Book-21 day loan Youth Services
Shelby Township Library Copies Material Location
E BUNT 2 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
St. Clair Shores Public Library Copies Material Location
E B 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Sterling Heights Public Library Copies Material Location
E BUNTING 3 Book-21 day loan Youth Services
RE BUNTING AWARD COLLECTION 1 Reference Youth Services
Utica Public Library Copies Material Location
E B 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Warren - Civic Center Branch Copies Material Location
E BUNT 2 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Warren - Dorothy Busch Branch Copies Material Location
E BUNTING S 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Summary
In a night of rioting, Daniel and his mother are forced to leave their apartment for the safety of a shelter. Diaz has not been afraid to take risks in illustrating the story with thickly textured paintings against a background of torn-paper and found-object collage. Without becoming cluttered or gimmicky, these pictures manage to capture a calamitous atmosphere that finally calms. . . . Both author and artist have managed to portray a politically charged event without pretense or preaching.--The Bulletin Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.
Publishers Weekly Review
In a starred review of this 1995 Caldecott winner, PW praised the "thought-provoking" and "thoroughly believable" text, about urban violence, and the "dazzling" mixed-media collages. Ages 3-8. (Apr.) From: Reed Elsevier Inc. Copyright Reed Business Information
School Library Journal Review
K-Gr 3-Daniel and his mother watch through their window as an urban riot is in progress. She tries to explain what is happening as he sees the laughing people break into the neighborhood stores and rob them. One of the victims is Mrs. Kim, whose cat is the enemy of his cat, Jasmine. Daniel's mother doesn't shop at Mrs. Kim's store because she feels it's better to ``buy from our own people.'' Later, their building is set on fire and he and his mother go with their neighbors to a shelter. The boy worries about Jasmine, and is relieved when a fireman brings her and Mrs. Kim's cat to the shelter. The felines have learned to get along in their shared danger. Bunting skillfully uses the voice of the child narrator. His innocent view of the riots makes the destructive behavior of the rioters more abhorrent. His suggestion that the cats were enemies only because they did not know each other well enough enables the adults to reach out to one another and bridge the distance their prejudice has kept between them. Diaz illustrates the story with bold, dark, stylized acrylic paintings framed by collage backgrounds of various textured objects usually reflecting the text. When the rioters loot a dry cleaners, for example, the background is wire hangers and plastic film. The pictures are more arresting than appealing, but they invite discussion and will stimulate thoughtful responses to this quietly powerful story.-Louise L. Sherman, Anna C. Scott School, Leonia, NJ From: Reed Elsevier Inc. Copyright Reed Business Information
Booklist Review
Ages 5-9. Bunting says she wrote this story after the Los Angeles riots made her wonder about what riots mean to the children who live through them. A boy and his cat look down from the window at people rioting in the streets below. His mother explains that rioting can happen when people get angry: "They want to smash and destroy. They don't care anymore what's right and wrong." The boy says that they look angry, but they look happy, too. He sees them looting Mrs. Kim's grocery store across the street; his mother never shopped there. That night, the apartment building burns, and everyone has to rush out to the shelter. The boy's cat is gone, and so is Mrs. Kim's cat, but a kind fire fighter finds both animals; they were hiding together. Then Bunting overstates her message: maybe the people, like the cats, need to get to know each other, so the boy's mother and Mrs. Kim agree to visit. Diaz's art is powerful--pulsating and crowded; part street mural, part urban collage. In each double-page spread, the background is a photograph of found objects and debris in a variety of textures and jagged shapes. On the right-hand page is an acrylic painting like a view through a heavy window, with thick lines and bright neon colors showing a multicultural cast. In fine contrast, the story is told quietly from the child's point of view, safe with his mother despite the fear, reaching out to the neighborhood community within the chaos. ~--Hazel ~Rochman From: Syndetics Solutions, Inc. Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.

Childrens Literature Comprehensive Database Review

Full View From Catalog
Personal Author Bunting, Eve, 1928-
Title Smoky night / written by Eve Bunting ; illustrated by David Diaz.
Publication info San Diego, CA : Harcourt Brace, 1994.
Physical descrip 1 v. (unpaged) : ill. ; 26
Summary When the Los Angeles riots break out in the streets of their neighborhood, a young boy and his mother learn the values of getting along with others no matter what their background or nationality.
Subject term Riots--California--Los Angeles--Juvenile fiction.
Subject term Interpersonal relations--Juvenile fiction.
Subject term Neighborliness--Juvenile fiction.
Added author Diaz, David,
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