Book Descriptions
for The Most Magnificent Thing by Ashley Spires
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
A girl has a vision of the most magnificent thing and sets to work making her idea a reality. “The girl saws and glues and adjusts … She twists and tweaks and fastens.” But her creation is all wrong. So she starts over. And over. And over. Nothing she makes is as magnificent as the vision she had in her head. Frustration ensues. Then a tiny little tantrum (“She SMASHES pieces into shapes. She JAMS parts together. She PUMMELS the little bits in … Her hands feel too BIG to work and her brain is too full of all the not-right things.”) She and her assistant (a pug-like dog) go for a walk, and there are all her cast-off creations. As she looks closer, she begins to notice something right about each one of them. The neighbors think so, too, repurposing her cast-offs while she combines the best of every one of them into a most magnificent thing indeed. Ashley Spires’s deftly uses humor in both narrative and art to explore the very real frustration — and elation — that comes with creativity, and sometimes just with being a kid. (Ages 4–8)
CCBC Choices 2015. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2015. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
A little girl and her canine assistant set out to make the most magnificent thing. But after much hard work, the end result is not what the girl had in mind. Frustrated, she quits. Her assistant suggests a long walk, and as they walk, it slowly becomes clear what the girl needs to do to succeed. A charming story that will give kids the most magnificent thing: perspective!
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.