The Big Green Book

The Big Green Book

The Big Green Book tells the story of a boy who finds a strange book in his uncle’s library. It turns out to be full of magic, letting him play tricks and even outsmart the adults around him. Maurice Sendak’s drawings make the story feel even more playful. They are […]

Continue Reading

An Edward Lear Alphabet

An Edward Lear Alphabet

An Edward Lear Alphabet is Vladimir Radunsky’s take on the classic nonsense verse of Edward Lear. In this book Radunsky pairs Lear’s playful, often absurd rhymes with his own bold, witty illustrations. Each letter of the alphabet is accompanied by a short Lear poem, full of odd characters, strange animals, […]

Continue Reading

Fables

Fables

Fables is a 1980 picture book written and illustrated by Arnold Lobel. The book contains twenty original fables featuring all kinds of animal characters, from crocodiles and ostriches to pigs, camels, and owls. In 1981 it received the Caldecott Medal for illustration. Each fable takes up a single page and […]

Continue Reading

Red Army Parade

Red Army Parade

Red Army Parade is a wordless picture book. It is colorful and festive, filled with light, mostly line-based illustrations that feel highly dynamic and rhythmic. Deyneka drew with colored strokes — red and gray, black and yellow — freely moving away from naturalistic color and often abandoning conventional perspective. Cavalry […]

Continue Reading

Electrician

Electrician

Aleksandr Deyneka’s festive colors could also give way, even in children’s books, to the severity of everyday labor. What gives these books their energy is Deyneka’s admiration for difficult physical work. It is no coincidence that the hero of two of his books from 1930 became the electrician: a figure […]

Continue Reading

In the Clouds

In the Clouds

Alexander Deyneka’s In the Clouds was first published in 1930 and later reissued several times. Dedicated entirely to aviation, the book presents readers with a kind of visual catalogue of flying machines and aeronautical equipment, from parachutes to military aircraft. There is almost no text apart from short captions such […]

Continue Reading

The Tale of the Golden Cockerel

The Tale of the Golden Cockerel

The Tale of the Golden Cockerel illustrated by Vladimir Konashevich was published in 1949 and became one of the artist’s most celebrated interpretations of Alexander Pushkin’s fairy tales. Pushkin’s poem constantly shifts between satire, fantasy, and theatrical spectacle, and Konashevich follows this rhythm with remarkable ease. His illustrations balance elegance […]

Continue Reading

Good Griselle

Good Griselle

“Good Griselle” is a children’s picture book illustrated by David Christiana, based on the traditional folktale also known as Patient Griselda, which appears in various European literary traditions, including versions by Giovanni Boccaccio and Geoffrey Chaucer. The book retells the story of Griselle, a young woman whose patience and loyalty […]

Continue Reading

Animals of the Bible

Animals of the Bible

“Animals of the Bible” is a children’s book written by Helen Dean Fish and illustrated by Dorothy Pulis Lathrop. It was first published in 1937 in the United States. The book presents a selection of passages from the Bible in which animals appear, accompanied by Lathrop’s black-and-white illustrations. Rather than […]

Continue Reading

De geschiedenis van een muis

De geschiedenis van een muis

“De geschiedenis van een muis” (The Story of a Mouse) is a work by Wilhelm Busch, originally created in German under the title Die Geschichte einer Maus. It belongs to Busch’s characteristic genre of illustrated stories in verse, where short rhymed texts are closely paired with sequential drawings. The story […]

Continue Reading

Zoks and Bada

Zoks and Bada

Once upon a time, a shaggy black Bada lived in a little house by a pond. He lived well, but then zoks appeared — and that was the end of his peaceful life. Bada decided to raise the zoks properly: morning washing, exercise, healthy food. But there turned out to […]

Continue Reading

The Little Humpbacked Horse

The Little Humpbacked Horse

The Little Humpbacked Horse by Pyotr Yershov, a classic 19th-century Russian fairy tale in verse, has always been a challenging text for illustrators. It shifts quickly from humor to fantasy, from everyday scenes to full-scale fairy tale, and not every artist manages to hold all of this together. The 1993 […]

Continue Reading

The Panjandrum picture book

The Panjandrum picture book

At the end of the 19th century, Randolph Caldecott changed how picture books worked. Instead of treating illustrations as decoration, he made them part of the storytelling itself — adding movement, timing, and humor that the text alone doesn’t carry. This approach became a turning point for children’s books. The […]

Continue Reading

Seven-Year-Old Archer

Seven-Year-Old Archer

The collection of Sámi folktales Seven-Year-Old Archer was published in 1990 by the Murmansk publishing house. The book contains twenty-six traditional stories. Although the illustrations differ slightly in color and style from some of Tsikota’s other works, his unmistakable artistic voice remains — once you have seen Tsikota’s drawings, they […]

Continue Reading

Poor Shaydullah

Poor Shaydullah

Shaydullah is a beggar who wants to know why his prayers go unanswered. One day, he sets off on a journey, visiting different people and asking for guidance. Each encounter gives him an answer, but it’s never quite what he expects — and Shaydullah struggles to put it into practice. […]

Continue Reading