5/22/2023 0 Comments Lullaby for a black motherIllustrator’s agent: Rebecca Sherman, Writers. A quiet but welcome introduction to the writer’s work for the very young. Swirls of grass and celestial orbs embellish daytime scenes, while the lights of tall buildings join with the stars above to form a backdrop for several nocturnal spreads. “Moon,/ Moon,/ Great diamond moon” shows the white-gowned, long-haired mother floating among the clouds, holding her son up so he can see the shining disk in a dark, gray-blue sky. words as smooth as a song, the poet Langston Hughes celebrates the love between an African American mother and her baby. He renders “A necklace of stars” with a bird flying around mother and child, leaving a trail of stars around the woman’s neck. Qualls (Freedom Song) keeps his artwork simple, painting a series of spreads that hew closely to the words. The poem’s images of night and innocence are well suited for a picture book, too. “My little dark baby,/ My little earth-thing,/ My little love-one,/ What shall I sing/ For your lullaby?” Hughes wrote this poem more than 80 years ago, but its playful language and informal lines sound startlingly fresh and modern. words as smooth as a song, the poet Langston Hughes celebrates the love between an African American mother and her baby.
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