Book Descriptions
for Degas and the Dance by Susan Goldman Rubin
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Artist Edgar Degas created more than 1,000 studies of ballet dancers and ballet students between 1855 and 1905. He spent many hours in ballet studios watching young dancers being trained. These children were known as petits rats because of their hard, exhausting lives. Susan Goldman Rubin deftly describes the world of the petits rats and Degas’ own exacting work recreating that world on canvas in a handsome volume that underscores the demands of being an artist in any medium. “Degas drew the same poses again and again, just as the dancers repeated their positions and stops again and again.” Degas’ sympathy for the young dancers was apparent in his behavior toward them, and especially in his work. Numerous paintings and sketches by Degas are reproduced in full color. Each reproduction is dated and its subject described so that readers will understand what they are seeing, which is often a reflection of what the author has described in her narrative. (Ages 8-12)
CCBC Choices 2003 . © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2003. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
The young ballet students of Paris were called petits rats at the time of Degas. He realized that ballet is much like art, it needs lots of hard work and practice. More than 30 Degas paintings and drawings capture the development of a little girl into a ballerina in this children's book.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.