Let’s
Fix Up the House. By Robert Pizzo.
Schiffer Kids. $9.99.
Let’s
Fix Up the Yard. By Robert Pizzo.
Schiffer Kids. $9.99.
Clichés become clichés because there is a kernel of truth in them.
Sometimes more than a kernel. It is a cliché of children’s books, especially
board books for the youngest readers and pre-readers, that their visuals must
be sweet and simple and unworldly, their content educational in only the most
simplistic sense possible, their ability to teach largely limited to such
foundational concepts as the numbers 1-10 or formulaic illustrations of objects
beginning with specific letters of the alphabet. Not all board books are
formulaic, but enough of them are so that families looking for new ones can
quickly become dismayed by the sameness of far too many of the offerings.
But then there are Robert Pizzo’s books. Pizzo has the rather
revolutionary idea that children, even the youngest children, are interested in
the everyday world around them, and can be taught about it even if they are too
young to read detailed explanations about real-world objects and tasks. They
can, he asserts, familiarize themselves not only with the latest version of “K
is for Kangaroo” and “Z is for Zebra” but also with elements of the world that
they are far more likely to encounter in their own lives than all the
intriguing-looking creatures with whom they are highly unlikely ever to
interact.
Thus, in Let’s Fix Up the House
and Let’s Fix Up the Yard, Pizzo uses
geometric precision and a clear understanding of how things work to present, in
board-book form, quotidian tools and the ways people use them – very likely
including young children’s own parents and, perhaps sooner rather than later,
the children themselves. The result is to-do lists in highly visual,
semi-realistic form: not fully realistic in illustration, since the tools and
tasks are boiled down to their essences for purposes of clarity, but quite
realistic in showing just what those tools and tasks involve and how they are
done.
In each book, the left-hand pages, which open with the words “We’ll
need,” show a specific stylized tool of some sort, while the right-hand pages
show the tool in use and illustrate what it accomplishes. Pizzo’s art has
clarity and precision that make the whole process look simple, although it is
anything but: he manages to boil down to its essence every task and technique,
so even very young children can see what a real-world item looks like and how
it manages real-world accomplishments.
So Let’s Fix Up the House
shows, on one left-hand page, a hammer – stripped to its essence and drawn so
it is instantly recognizable. The right-hand page shows a stylized adult –
think of a very colorful version of the figures used to illustrate warning
signs or public restrooms – about to use the hammer to drive a nail into a
strip of wood above a window, with the words “to nail the wood trim.” Another
page says “We’ll need a level” – and it is a beautifully rendered one, with
three different bubbles allowing leveling at different angles – opposite a page
that says “to straighten the shelf,” on which the use of a level to do just
that is shown with straightforward exactness. And there is the left-hand age
featuring a saw, with a right-hand one saying “to cut the lumber” and making it
abundantly clear just how that happens. To wrap up the book with a slight
twist, the final pages say “We’ll need a vacuum” – a shop vac, to be precise,
and yes, it is precisely drawn and looks nothing like a standard in-house
vacuum – “to clean up. All done!” That is a great summary lesson: cleaning up
thoroughly after completing a project is a crucial step that all too many
adults neglect. Kids won’t, after they absorb Pizzo’s presentation: they will know
that cleanup is integral to fix-up.
Let’s Fix Up the Yard follows the same narrative and presentation pattern with equal effectiveness. On one two-page spread, “We’ll need a leaf blower – to collect the leaves,” and the handheld blower is shown in just enough detail to make its real-world appearance clear, while the person using it is wearing ear protection and the larger-than-in-real-life and beautifully colored fall leaves are flying around the page. Elsewhere, what is needed is a wheelbarrow “to haul the dirt,” which is shown piled high and, for a touch of amusement, with a bird perched atop the mound and looking at the person pushing the load along. Whether as simple as a pack of seeds “to grow the vegetables” or as complex-looking as a cement mixer “to pour the concrete,” every outdoor tool and item is put on display with admirable clarity and shown in use in ways that children of just about any age will be able to understand. The very end of the yard-focused book is more amusing than the end of the house-focused one, and quite equally accurate. “We’ll need to rest” (the picture shows the two adults, male and female, wiping their foreheads after some very taxing work) – “when we’re all done!” And that last bit of art, with the two hard-working people lounging on chairs in a yard whose spiffy appearance directly picks up on earlier illustrations that showed them performing various tasks, certainly communicates just how well-earned their rest is. Indeed, the clarity of communication in Let’s Fix Up the House and Let’s Fix Up the Yard is always front-and-center, showing Pizzo’s exceptional ability to rethink the basics of illustrative education, demonstrating that even the well-worn format of the board book does not need to come across as if it is worn out.
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