Available Formats
Gorilla
By (Author) Anthony Browne
Illustrated by Anthony Browne
Walker Books Ltd
Walker Books Ltd
1st September 2000
United Kingdom
Children
Fiction
823.914
Winner of Boston Globe-Horn Book Award Honor Book, Picture Book 1988 (United States)
Paperback
32
Width 380mm, Height 480mm
596g
Hannah loves gorillas but has never seen one. Her father's too busy to take her to the zoo - or for anything else come to that. For her birthday, Hannah asks her father for a gorilla - but is disappointed when she discovers that the gorilla she's got is just a toy one. But then something extraordinary happens ... the toy turns into a real gorilla, who puts on her father's hat and coat and takes her off for a magical visit to the zoo...
One of the best picture books for the over-threes I've seen in a long time. Parents Sad, joyous and full of surprises for the sharp-eyed...Browne asks his readers to think...His strong visual images are arresting, compulsive. The Good Book Guide to Children's Books
When I see my childhood drawings, I realize that they are not very different from the illustrations I do now, says Anthony Browne. All children are surrealists in a sense. One of the things the surrealists were trying to do was to paint familiar things as if they were seeing them for the first time. Children are, of course, actually seeing them for the first time. Winner of the highest international honor for illustration, the Hans Christian Andersen Awardas well as the prestigious Kate Greenaway Medal (twice) and the Kurt Maschler Award (three times)Anthony Browne has garnered much praise for his crisp, polished artwork full of tongue-in-cheek humor and hidden surprises. His book Silly Billyreflects this trademark style. In the humorous and affecting tale about anxiety, a homespun solution from Grandma and a final clever twist provide young readers with an antidote to worry. I didnt want the worry dolls to be the magic that would cure Billy, notes the author-illustrator. At first hes worrying about himselfthe fears of threatening hats, shoes, etc., but Billys inner worries are turned out, by at first worrying (or caring) about worry dolls, and then caring about his friends. Worrying can be a kind of caring, and as such is a healthy part of a balanced emotional life. Anyone familiar with Anthony Brownes books knows he likes to use his surrealist style to personify primates, from the hapless Willy the chimp, star of a comical series of picture books, to the beloved Gorilla, to the personable chimpanzee of I Like Books. I am intrigued by gorillas and the contrast they representtheir huge strength and gentleness, he explains. Theyre thought of as being very fierce creatures, but theyre not. When Anthony Browne begins work on a book, the ideas come to him as a strange combination of story and images. Its like planning a filmworking out the pages of a book is like deciding on the scenes of a film. While growing up in Yorkshire, England, Anthony Browne spent hours drawing with his father, an influence that stayed with him into adulthood. He says of his father, He was an unusual manoutwardly strong and confident, but also shy and sensitivea bit like the gorillas I love to illustrate now. After studying graphic design, Anthony Browne went on to paint illustrations for medical textbooks for three years, then switched to designing greeting cards. This, in turn, led to creating childrens books when a greeting-card gorilla decided to take on a life of his own. The father of two grown children, Anthony Browne lives with his wife in Kent, England. When I see my childhood drawings, I realize that they are not very different from the illustrations I do now, says Anthony Browne. All children are surrealists in a sense. One of the things the surrealists were trying to do was to paint familiar things as if they were seeing them for the first time. Children are, of course, actually seeing them for the first time. Winner of the highest international honor for illustration, the Hans Christian Andersen Awardas well as the prestigious Kate Greenaway Medal (twice) and the Kurt Maschler Award (three times)Anthony Browne has garnered much praise for his crisp, polished artwork full of tongue-in-cheek humor and hidden surprises. His book Silly Billyreflects this trademark style. In the humorous and affecting tale about anxiety, a homespun solution from Grandma and a final clever twist provide young readers with an antidote to worry. I didnt want the worry dolls to be the magic that would cure Billy, notes the author-illustrator. At first hes worrying about himselfthe fears of threatening hats, shoes, etc., but Billys inner worries are turned out, by at first worrying (or caring) about worry dolls, and then caring about his friends. Worrying can be a kind of caring, and as such is a healthy part of a balanced emotional life. Anyone familiar with Anthony Brownes books knows he likes to use his surrealist style to personify primates, from the hapless Willy the chimp, star of a comical series of picture books, to the beloved Gorilla, to the personable chimpanzee of I Like Books. I am intrigued by gorillas and the contrast they representtheir huge strength and gentleness, he explains. Theyre thought of as being very fierce creatures, but theyre not. When Anthony Browne begins work on a book, the ideas come to him as a strange combination of story and images. Its like planning a filmworking out the pages of a book is like deciding on the scenes of a film. While growing up in Yorkshire, England, Anthony Browne spent hours drawing with his father, an influence that stayed with him into adulthood. He says of his father, He was an unusual manoutwardly strong and confident, but also shy and sensitivea bit like the gorillas I love to illustrate now. After studying graphic design, Anthony Browne went on to paint illustrations for medical textbooks for three years, then switched to designing greeting cards. This, in turn, led to creating childrens books when a greeting-card gorilla decided to take on a life of his own. The father of two grown children, Anthony Browne lives with his wife in Kent, England.