The loon's necklace / retold by William Toye ; illustrated by Elizabeth Cleaver.
Material type: TextPublication details: Toronto : Oxford University Press, 1977Description: [24] p. : col. ill. ; 25 cmISBN: 0195406753Subject(s): Tsimshian -- Legends | Loons -- Children's literature | First Nations -- Legends -- Loons | First Nations -- Children's literatureSummary: According to Tsimshian legend, when an old man's sight was restored by Loon, he gave the bird his precious shell necklace as a reward. That is why the loon has a white collar and speckles on its back. This Canadian First Nations tale first became generally known when it was the subject of a distinguished short film released in 1950. When Elizabeth Cleaver illustrated it in 1977, the book she created with William Toye very quickly became popular and remains one of the best loved Canadian picture storybooks. Elizabeth Cleaver's rich and beautiful style of picture making, collages assembled with torn paper, paper cutouts and linocuts, gives new visual excitement to the splendours of the British Columbia interior, and to the magic of an Aboriginal legend.Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Children's Literature | BCACCS Resource Centre Regular | G20 T69 L66 1977 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 1 | Available | T 239 |
William Toye retold the legends in three of Elizabeth Cleaver's other books, The Mountain Goats of Temlaham, How Summer Came to Canada, and The Fire Stealer, and is also the author of The St Lawrence and Cartier Discovers the St Lawrence, both of which won the Book of the Year Award of the Canadian Association of Children's Librarians.
According to Tsimshian legend, when an old man's sight was restored by Loon, he gave the bird his precious shell necklace as a reward. That is why the loon has a white collar and speckles on its back. This Canadian First Nations tale first became generally known when it was the subject of a distinguished short film released in 1950. When Elizabeth Cleaver illustrated it in 1977, the book she created with William Toye very quickly became popular and remains one of the best loved Canadian picture storybooks. Elizabeth Cleaver's rich and beautiful style of picture making, collages assembled with torn paper, paper cutouts and linocuts, gives new visual excitement to the splendours of the British Columbia interior, and to the magic of an Aboriginal legend.
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