Reviews

Dazzle Ships: World War I and the Art of Confusion by Victo Ngai, Chris Barton

amysutton's review against another edition

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5.0

I loved this! I have never heard of Dazzle Ships (WW1 camoflauge to protect boats from German torpedo attacks), so this book was really interesting. The illustrations were absolutely perfect. I felt like I was looking through an art book at times. This would be great for upper elementary teachers who wanted to reinforce WW1 terminology while focusing on some really cool lesser known historical info.

I received a copy of this ebook from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

cacia's review against another edition

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4.0

3.5 stars rounded up

kailawil's review against another edition

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4.0

I love big awesome beautiful books filled with stuff I didn't know about it.

shighley's review against another edition

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5.0

This book definitely dazzles! Why did I know nothing of this practice? It's probably related to my embarrassing lack of knowledge about WW I. I am in awe of the painstaking research Barton did for this book; it seems like there is an abundance of well-researched nonfiction picture books these days. Barton's explanation of how and why he investigates a topic would be a great model for students.

The only juxtaposition for me was the slight hint of whimsy with the eyes in the periscope contrasted with the seriousness of war.

Yet another home run from Barton, with amazing illustrations. I checked this out because I saw this on some "Best of 2017" lists.

abe25's review

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funny informative reflective fast-paced

5.0

Great book about camouflage in ww2!

kellylibrarian's review

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adventurous informative medium-paced

4.0

sharonskinner's review against another edition

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3.0

I learned something new! I especially liked the author's comments on researching NF for Picture Books.

nettelou's review

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fast-paced

5.0

pwbalto's review against another edition

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5.0

What you'll notice first about this book is THIS ILLUSTRATOR. Sophisticated wavy lines weave and undulate like ribbons across the page, mimicking light on water, cloud shadows, and the dazzle patterns that camouflaged British and U.S. ships.

Then the story kicks in, and you may be blown away by the audacity of the idea of dazzle. Instead of painting these ships with camouflage that duplicates natural colors and patterns, dazzle ships were high-contrast and largely geometric. Like giant metal carousel horses painted by Mondrian. Avant garde drag queens of the sea.

And it's only after you've been distracted and dizzied by the art (which, don't let me out of here without performing some kind of obesiance to Victo Ngai - this is her first picture book but her editorial, product, cover, and advertising work http://victo-ngai.com/Work demonstrates a breathtaking breadth of skill. I'm thinking of getting a new tattoo) and charmed by the improbable story of dazzle's inspiration and execution that you notice the writing.

So this is our Texas pal Chris Barton, whose zeal for primary research has brought us such original nonfiction as The Day-Glo Brothers and the award-winning Whoosh! Lonnie Johnson's Super-Soaking Stream of Inventions. Usually, children's nonfiction builds on or is inspired by nonfiction written for adults. Not here. If you wanted to write a paper about the invention of Day-Glo colors, Chris's book would be one of your best sources.

One thing you'll notice in truly true stories - and kids DEFINITELY notice this - is that they don't always follow the expected path. Chris is adept at riding the twists and turns of real stories rather than trying to force them into a happy-ending shape. When he encountered inconclusive evidence as to whether dazzle actually worked, it thwarted his ability to end the book on a predictable high note. "I admit that I was initially flummoxed when I realized that "AND DAZZLE SHIPS WON THE WAR!!!" wasn't going to fly for the conclusion," he told me.

Instead, in a passage that echoes the contradictory, mysterious nature of dazzle, he leaves it open-ended. Did dazzle make a difference? Maybe? But the sailors riding these giant floating cans across vast oceans, exposed to the sky and vulnerable to attack from below, must have been comforted by the effort that was taken to hide them in plain sight.

More of this review online at unadulterated.us. http://www.unadulterated.us/pink-me/2017/06/dazzle-ships-world-war-art-confusion-chris-barton-victo-ngai-review.html

beecheralyson's review against another edition

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5.0

One of Barton's best. And the illustrations are gorgeous.