Bruce Handy is momenteel een bijdragend redacteur bij Vanity Fair en brengt zijn uitgebreide redactionele ervaring van publicaties als Spy en Time naar zijn huidige rol. Zijn schrijfwerk, dat artikelen, essays, recensies en humoristische stukken omvat, is verschenen in prestigieuze bladen zoals The New York Times Magazine, The New York Times Book Review, New York magazine, Rolling Stone en Vogue, wat zijn veelzijdige literaire stem laat zien. Handy's debuutboek, "Wild Things", biedt een kijkje in zijn unieke vertelstijl. Hij woont in Manhattan met zijn vrouw en hun twee kinderen.
Is there any creature in the world happier than a dog with a ball in its
mouth? Maybe a cat in the sun? Or a kid eating ice cream? This gentle book,
with its soft and evocative colored pencil illustrations, is philosophical in
its approach to the millions of forms that happiness can take, as well as the
contrasting disappointments and sorrows that we encounter as we navigate our
lives.
In this fantastical picture book perfect for fans of Aaron Becker’s Journey, a human child and a child from another planet discover that no matter where you live or what your books are like, reading—and sharing—are universal. A cosmic celebration of the joy of sharing books and having new experiences awaits readers in this captivating wordless picture book for ages 4 to 8. A child busy reading in a treehouse spots a family who seems to have just arrived on Earth for a picnic. The youngest member of the alien family holds a mind-bendingly strange object. Could it be a book from outer space? At the end of this gorgeously illustrated tale, each child returns home with a book from far away to remember a kind stranger. Sure to take its place among gently fantastical favorites like Sophie Blackall’s If You Come to Earth and Carson Ellis’s Du Iz Tak?, this picture book will enchant and delight curious kids and book lovers everywhere.
From NYT Best Children's Book author Bruce Handy, a luminous picture book that
invites careful observation of light and shadow in the natural world, as well
as in our own emotional landscape.