What makes great kids’ picture books great?(medium.com) |
What makes great kids’ picture books great?(medium.com) |
[0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caldecott_Medal#Recipients
[1]: http://www.ala.org/alsc/awardsgrants/bookmedia/caldecottmeda...
[2]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flotsam_(David_Wiesner_book)
I saw this and frowned. Because a lot of children's picture books are that. Predictable and targeted for best sale.
Children's picture books are a strangely risk averse market. Realistic fiction rules the segment, with publishers opting for extremely simply stories and wording and nice, but uncomplicated illustrations. There's been a real turn in the past few years away from thought provoking or older age fully illustrated books along the lines of Chris Van Alsburg and others in the form of a very early reader style. And this, unfortunately, has really stifled some of the more creative titles we used to see.
I remember seeing this quite clearly when my wife and I attended the Bologna Book Fair a couple of years ago. Her being a fantasy illustrator, we scheduled a large number of portfolio reviews, and from each of them, the message was the same. Too fantastical, too complicated. Stick with what sells, and target younger kids. So your picture books remain "Jimmy learns to poop" or something about animals.
I suppose you have to identify your market, but it was disappointing in hearing this, because your really "artistic" picture book seems to be a dying trend.
A better article would be, what makes crap children's picture books crap?