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  • Published: 29 October 2024
  • ISBN: 9781962770088
  • Imprint: NY Review Books
  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 32
  • RRP: $39.99
Categories:

Griso

The One and Only





A unicorn searches for others just like him in this vibrant and shapeshifting tale by Batchelder-Honor author and illustrator, Roger Mello

A unicorn searches for others just like him in this vibrant and shapeshifting tale by Batchelder-Honor author and illustrator, Roger Mello

The last of his kind, Griso travels the world searching for unicorn companions. He asks beetles, chameleons, and buffalos if they’ve seen any mythical creatures like him, and all send him on his way saying, “Neither here nor at the edge of the world.” Griso gallops across plains, marshes, and mountains, he trots into the sunset and chats with fearsome narwals by the sea. On each spread, we see Griso rendered in a new artistic style, portrayed as a shadowy cave painting, a chivalrous medieval stead, or lost along a mind-bending surrealist horizon. Griso, the Unique introduces young readers to artistic movements spanning the 7th to 18th century, leaping across time and color with the flip of a page. In Daniel Hahn’s exquisite translation, Griso, the Unique opens the doors to a world of African painting, Tang Dynasty murals, medieval tapestries, and art hidden beneath Egyptian pyramids. A song of color, time, expression, and a fantastical search for belonging by Brazilian visionary, Roger Mello.

  • Published: 29 October 2024
  • ISBN: 9781962770088
  • Imprint: NY Review Books
  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 32
  • RRP: $39.99
Categories:

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Praise for Griso


“Ingenious, vivid, beautiful, monumental, and dreamlike.” —Peter Sís (on Roger Mello’s body of work)

“Elegant linework mixes with torn paper and soft, textured colors as a parade of luminous, exotic caricatures and their accoutrements unfold . . . the effect is magical. The interactions probe issues around wealth, possession, and compassion.”
Kirkus Reviews, starred review for João by a Thread

A jewel box of a book . . . Mello embraces a bright, lacquer red to tell the story of a boy alone in bed at night . . . Directly and honestly, Mello faces the fear that grips so many of us, even well into adulthood . . . João startles awake and discovers that he is exposed, laid bare: In his terror, his blanket has unraveled. With touching resourcefulness, he reweaves his blanket out of scattered words, making up a lullaby as he goes. Such is the solace of language.
–Sarah Shun-lien Bynum, New York Times for João by a Thread

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