In 234 words, Patricia MacLachlan tells the story of how young Henri Matisse became the master painter of color and light and movement.
Growing up in gray northern France, near the border with Belgium, Henri’s mother Anna Heloise brightened his world withcolor. She painted porcelain plates with scenes of nature. The plates hung on the walls of their house along with vivid red rugs that also covered a dirt floor. And Henri watched the colors of his pigeon’s feathers shimmer — “iridescence” his mother told him.
In The Iridescence of Birds: A Book About Henri Matisse, Patricia MacLachlan draws a child in by using the second person point of view and asking “ if you” questions, until the child knows, that if you had grown up in Henri Matisse’s world, then you would become a painter, too.
The Iridescence of Birds: A Book About Henri Matisse
Back Cover Illustrated by Hadley Hooper
Henri Matisse
Henri Matisse attended law school, passed the bar exam, and with his father’s help found a position as a law clerk — although he did not enjoy practicing law. But everything changed when Henri became ill with appendicitis. While recovering, his mother gave him paints and supplies. It was then that Henri knew he would spend the rest of his life as an artist.
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how fascinating! and in second person no less. wow!
The book is so simple and so well written — and in second person, a difficult point of view.