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A SKY FULL OF KITES by Osmond Molarsky

A SKY FULL OF KITES

by Osmond Molarsky & illustrated by Helen Hipshman

Pub Date: March 29th, 1996
ISBN: 1-883672-26-0
Publisher: Tricycle

Colin paints a gigantic picture with his new paints, but can't find a place to hang it. Everyone likes it—people at school, the bank, the fire department, the freight yard, the art museum—but no one wants to display it. After a chain of rejections, he turns it into a kite; it flies for three days and three nights, making him famous and putting his artwork in demand. This fable about freedom of expression follows a reliable formula—a hero on a search—but the litany of disappointments stifles an already predictable story (the title points the way). Stiff language chronicles what turns out to be a guided tour of San Francisco, with Hipshman providing scenic locales. Her realistic watercolors are drafted with personality, but the size of Colin's painting keeps shifting; his zeal is admirable, and his persistence childlike, but the book is never very convincing. (Picture book. 5-8)