Bound To Stay Bound

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 Gifts from Georgia's garden : how Georgia O'Keeffe nourished her art
 Author: Robinson, Lisa

 Publisher:  Holiday House (2024)

 Dewey: 759.13
 Classification: Biography
 Physical Description: [33] p., col. ill., 24 x 29 cm

 BTSB No: 759446 ISBN: 9780823452668
 Ages: 4-8 Grades: K-3

 Subjects:
 O'Keeffe, Georgia, -- 1887-1986
 Women painters -- Biography
 Abiquiu (N.M.) -- Biography

Price: $23.28

Summary:
Tells how artist Georgia O'Keeffe made her famous paintings while maintaining her sustainable homestead in New Mexico.

 Illustrator: Hooper, Hadley

Reviews:
   Kirkus Reviews (+) (01/01/24)
   School Library Journal (05/24/24)
   Booklist (+) (01/01/24)
 The Hornbook (+) (00/03/24)

Full Text Reviews:

School Library Journal - 05/24/2024 Gr 1–3—While Georgia O'Keeffe's art has been properly celebrated in several picture books, this loving tribute focuses on its sources of inspiration—most particularly the land and its bounty. After exchanging the skyscrapers of New York for a more solitary life beneath the broad skyscapes of New Mexico, Robinson writes, the artist planted a garden from which for the rest of her life she harvested sustainably grown fruit, vegetables, and flowers that nourished her art-making. Hooper unwisely attempts to reproduce several of O'Keeffe's paintings but, on other pages, along with lush floral sprays and spreads of baked goods, she offers more evocative images of close up leaves and flowers, of puffy clouds, and golden desert hills. These are interspersed with glimpses of the artist working on paper and canvas, carefully arranging potted succulents and animal bones, making her own clothes, and gazing contemplatively into the distance. "Her garden still grows today," the author concludes, though it may remain more abstract than real to young audiences as actual views of it are notably absent, and a closing photo of the artist only shows her kneeling on a patch of rocky, uncultivated ground. Still, earlier pictures of vegetable seed packets and a tally of flowers in the narrative at least hint at the titular gifts, and the back matter features brief guidelines for budding organic gardeners. Better yet, the trove of handwritten recipes she left behind is represented by a truly inspiring one for Pecan Butterballs (1 cup butter, 2 cups pecans, a little flour to hold things together—yum!). VERDICT Too limited in scope to be a first introduction to (arguably) the greatest American painter, though of some value for its insights into her character and later life.—John Edward Peters - Copyright 2024 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.

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