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Swan

The Life and Dance of Anna Pavlova

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The world is big.
Anna is small.
The snow is
everywhere
and all around.
But one night . . .
One night, her mother takes her to the ballet, and everything is changed. Anna finds a beauty inside herself that she cannot contain.
So begins the journey of a girl who will one day grow up to be the most famous prima ballerina of all time, inspiring legions of dancers after her: the brave, the generous, the transcendently gifted Anna Pavlova. Beautiful, inspirational, and triumphant, Anna Pavlova's life is masterfully captured in this exquisite picture book.
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 20, 2015
      In spare, verselike prose, Snyder follows the life of Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova from her artistic awakening as a dancer to the height of her fame and her death in 1931. Morstad gives Pavlova the grace of a porcelain doll, whether she is dancing as she hangs clothing on a line (“Shirt, shirt, laundry./ Shirt, shirt, laundry”), honing her craft after being admitted to the Imperial Ballet School, or performing her signature role in The Dying Swan. Snyder emphasizes Pavlova’s determination and hard work throughout, as well as her belief that “ballet was for everyone” (“When people
      throw flowers, Anna tosses them back”). An author’s note expands on biographical details hinted at in this tender,
      delicate recounting. Ages 5–8. Author’s agent: Tina Wexler, ICM. Illustrator’s agent: Emily van Beek, Folio Literary Management.

    • Kirkus

      May 1, 2015
      A poor Russian girl enchants the world with her romantic ballet performances. Pavlova was born in Czarist Russia, the daughter of a laundry woman. When her mother took her to a ballet performance, she was spellbound. After waiting two years to be accepted, she rose through the ranks of the Imperial Ballet School despite having what was considered an imperfect body. She excelled in the great 19th-century romantic roles and made "The Dying Swan," with music from The Carnival of the Animals, by Camille Saint-Saens, her signature piece. Pavlova traveled around the world sharing her gift and teaching, passing up 20th-century ballets choreographed to modern music and always enchanting audiences with her incomparable style. Snyder writes in the present tense in a delicate and poetic voice that mirrors Pavlova's onstage persona. Morstad's art, a combination of ink, gouache, graphite, pencil, and crayon, evokes beautiful Russian cityscapes, while scenes set in a dance studio effectively make use of a white background to showcase a solitary dancing beauty. Falling snow and images of flowers and feathers reappear through the pages as motifs of Pavlova's childhood, her passion for dance, and her too-young death. Young ballet lovers will be smitten with the story. (author's note, bibliography, quotation sources) (Picture book/biography. 6-9)

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      Starred review from September 1, 2015

      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. 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. The spare, lyrical text instead offers imagery that is more poetic than concrete. 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. On nearly every page, the lithe and lovely figure of Pavlova appears, usually in motion, always the embodiment of beauty and grace. Even her illness and death are presented in a dramatic, theatrical manner-fitting somehow for someone who lived and breathed the stage. VERDICT An enchanting glimpse of a dancer whose name has come to be synonymous with her most famous role.-Luann Toth, School Library Journal

      Copyright 2015 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • The Horn Book

      September 1, 2015
      In this exquisite introduction to ballet great Anna Pavlova (18811931), the impressionistic text begins the night young Anna goes out into the big city to see The Sleeping Beauty performed. Like the dancer onstage, Anna is awakened; consumed, she cannot sleep. Or sit / still / ever. Anna auditions for ballet school, is rejected, and auditions again two years later. This time she is accepted, and the work begins. Subsequent spreads follow Anna through her training; her roles, particularly her iconic Dying Swan; her growing fame; and her determination, as she tours the world, to make ballet accessible to everyone, everywhere. The rhythmic text lends her life the fairy-tale feeling of the ballets in which she performed. Delicate mixed-media illustrations are perfectly suited to Anna's grace, capturing her expressiveness with abstracted swan imagery that matches the text's lyricism. A muted palette gives the art a slightly vintage quality befitting the historical setting. An author's note provides more straightforward biographical information, including the circumstances of Pavlova's birth and death and the lengths she went in order to overcome the limitations of her frail build, weak back, and severely arched feet; it also highlights her legacy as an artist of the people. A bibliography encourages further reading about this remarkable prima ballerina. katie bircher

      (Copyright 2015 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:2.5
  • Lexile® Measure:500
  • Interest Level:K-3(LG)
  • Text Difficulty:0-2

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