Alphabetabum: An Album of Rare Photographs and Medium Verses
written by Chris Raschka
Photography collection by Vladimir Radunsky
New York Review Children’s Collection 10/01/2014
978-1-59017-817-1
Age 4 to 7 80 pages
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“An ALPHABET book?
“An ALBUM of old photos?
“We named it ALPHABETABUM.
“Here celebrated artist and author Vladimir Radunsky and Chris Raschka put a delightful new old-fashioned spin on the alphabet book. Radunsky has selected portraits off children from is spectacular collection of antique black-and-white photographs. Raschka has given the children names and written deliciously teasing rhymes about them. The result is ALPHABETABUM, a book of letters and pictures to which readers will happily return to again and again both to look and to learn.”
Opening
[A picture of a young girl in a short dress with a sash.]
“Aa
Awkward Agnes Alexandra
Shows her ample ankles
Although her knees are grander.”
Review
Vladimir Radunsky writes, “If these photos were taken in the late-nineteenth or early-twentieth centuries, then the children in them could have been our great-great-great grandparents! So we have an extraordinary chance to see what our great-great-great grandparents looked when they were children.”
There are 26 photographs of children of varying ages in Alphabetabum; the first original book from New York Review Children’s Collection (all others are reprinted classics). I looked closely at the eyes after reading Radunsky’s thoughts that one of these could be a great-great-great-grandparent, aunt, or uncle. I have never seen any pictures of my parents as children, so seeing what they might have worn captivated my attention as well.
Some of the portraits are comical, like young Baby Beulah Bridget who wears a huge white bow upon her tiny head. The bow is too big for her small head and looks to topple at any moment. From the clothing, it is obvious these children are from all over the world. One young boy, named Quiet Quentin Quint, wears long white pants under a black pair of knickers with an ornate jacket and cummerbund. Atop his head is a stocking cap (today, we call these skullcaps) and leans on a cricket bat. Quentin is a serious child.
The photographs in Alphabetabum range from the casual to the formal, though it would not have been a casual friend taking the casual picture. In all cases, the person behind, or next to, the lens would have been a professional photographer. Photographs back then took quite a while to develop and many people had to hold that smile for several minutes. In today’s instant world, I wonder if such portraits are possible.
Alphabetabum is an interesting and quite curious ABC book. It is really more for older kids and adults, not the young child trying to learn their ABC’s, though it could be done. These ABC’s are for those who love poetry, old photographs, and funny verses that try to define the child based on their clothing, they way they pose, and maybe a smile or lack thereof. The names are all alliterated and interesting. I like Alphabetabum because of it’s quirkiness and because I love old photos and photography. I don’t think you need to have those interests to find Alphabetabum worth your time. Alphabetabum will become endearing, leading you to want to share this unusual ABC picture book.
ALPHABETABUM: AN ALBUM OF RARE PHOTOGRAPHS AND MEDIUM VERSES. Text copyright © 2014 by Chris Raschka. Photographs copyright © 2014 by Vladimir Radunsky. Reproduced by permission of the publisher, New York Review Children’s Collection, New York, NY.
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Buy Alphabetabum at Amazon—B&N—Book Depository—New York Review of Books—your favorite bookstore.
Learn more about Alphabetabum HERE
Meet the author, Chris Raschka, at his twitter: https://twitter.com/ChrisRaschka
Meet the photography collector, Vladimir Radunsky, at his website: http://www.vladimirradunsky.com/
Find classic children’s books at the New York Review Children’s Collection website: http://www.nybooks.com/books/imprints/childrens/
The New York Review Children’s Collection is an imprint of New York Review of Books. http://www.nybooks.com/
Also by Chris Raschka

If You Were a Dog

Whaley Whale (Thingy Things)

Give and Take
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Also by Vladimir Radunsky

Advice to Little Girls

Hip Hop Dog

On a Beam of Light: A Story of Albert Einstein
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Review HERE
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Copyright © 2014 by Sue Morris/Kid Lit Reviews
What an interesting way to introduce the ABCs using antique photography. Quirky, indeed! Great review, Sue!
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Very quirky. Honestly, I don’t know if I would introduce the AC’s that way unless I had a kid who loved photos. With cell phones I suppose that is possible. I love the names of each child.
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I LOVE old photographs! This looks really good, Sue 🙂 Thanks!
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I liked it when I first saw it but wasn’t too sure how it would be accepted. I’m surprised so many like this, not that it is bad, because it is terrific, just that it is so different.
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This is a very unique book. It’s a cool idea!
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It was something to do with all those pictures of people he didn’t know. Now the author can say he collected the pictures knowing it would be a book one day. Yes?
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This book looks fun. It makes me wish I had 3 names instead of just one!
Love and licks,
Cupcake
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Three names, huh? Hm, how about Curiously Cunning Cupcake. This is not easy. 🙂
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🙂
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It may even seem more like a coffee table book for adults than children. Beautiful book and terrific review, Sue!
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This is hard to place in an exact category. I think you are right, a coffee table book could have worked.
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This is an intriguing book with unique photographs and verse. My grandparents were born in 1896, and the photos remind me of the early 20th century. Thank you for sharing.
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I believe the photographs are from late 1800’s and early 1900’s. Mr. Radunsky picked up photos for years in flea markets and such. I bet you could find someone wearing what your parents would have worn.
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I have photos of my parents in the early 1920s, my grandparents, great grandmother, great grandfather (1851) and great great grandmother (b 1830s). My grandmother was a flapper and I’ve seen her clothing. So, I do have photos of how they all dressed.
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