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Learning to Carve Argillite - (Sk'ad'a Stories) by Sara Florence Davidson & Robert Davidson (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- Based on Haida artist Robert Davidson's own childhood experiences, this beautiful story highlights learning through observation, as well as the role of Elders in sharing knowledge and mentorship.Learning to carve is a lifelong journey.
- 7-10 Years
- 9.1" x 8.1" Hardcover
- 40 Pages
- Juvenile Fiction, People & Places
- Series Name: Sk'ad'a Stories
Description
About the Book
With the help of his father and grandfather, a boy on Haida Gwaii practices to become a skillful carver. As he carefully works on a new piece, he remembers a trip to Slatechuck Mountain to gather the argillite, as well as his father's words about the importance of looking back to help us find our way.
Book Synopsis
Based on Haida artist Robert Davidson's own childhood experiences, this beautiful story highlights learning through observation, as well as the role of Elders in sharing knowledge and mentorship.
Learning to carve is a lifelong journey. With the help of his father and grandfather, a boy on Haida Gwaii practises to become a skillful carver. As he carefully works on a new piece, he remembers a trip to Slatechuck Mountain to gather the argillite, as well as his father's words about the importance of looking back to help us find our way.
Written by the creators of Potlatch as Pedagogy, this book brings the Sk'ad'a Principles to life through the art of Janine Gibbons.
Review Quotes
Among IBBY Canada's 2020-2022 From Sea to Sea to Sea: Celebrating Indigenous Picture Book Collection -- "IBBY Canada"
Among OLA's First Nations Communities READ Longlist, Children's Category
-- "Ontario Library Association (OLA)"Among CCBC's Best Books for Kids and Teens
-- "Canadian Children's Book Centre (CCBC)"The concept of intergenerational learning is woven into the books in both obvious and subtle ways.
-- "Quill & Quire"Davidson and Davidson's story is a snapshot of a memory that cohesively and effectively expresses a childhood embedded in love, in family, in tradition, and in art. The artwork is beautiful and thoughtful, often requiring second and third looks to pick up hidden details as the colours and flow of the images draw the eye over the pages. Highly recommended.
-- "CM Association"A quiet, beautiful meditation on how traditions are kept alive by passing them down from one generation to the next, by remembering the ways things were so we can more clearly see the way things can be. Shaped by youth, under the watchful guidance of Elders, like etchings in argillite.
--David A. Robertson