Tuesday, October 5, 2010

The Handmade Alphabet - by Laura Rankin


From a hand grasping two asparagus stalks to a zippered sleeve tracing the letter Z, Rankin's alphabet book is a glorious success as it displays the American Sign Language alphabet. The colored pencil illustrations on charcoal paper of varied hues depict one letter on each page--a pencil's eraser rubs away at a hand that signs the letter E , an icicle is balanced on a pinky, a muscular hand makes a V while holding a valentine. The hands here are as diverse and individual as the objects surrounding them--a baby's chubby fingers grip plastic keys, matronly hands with magenta-polished nails form the letter N , vivid bones of a hand, seen in an X-ray, show off X . Rankin's prefatory note describes how her deaf stepson "gained more thorough undertanding and total communication" when he learned sign language at Gallaudet University.

Review by Publishers Weekly, Reed Business Information, Inc. 

The Handmade Alphabet, illustrated and written by Laura Rankin. New York: Scholastic, 1991.

This book shows that not everyone learns the same way, especially in a classroom.  There are different cultures and people who learn through braille or sign language.  This book allows the reader to learn the alphabet through a different way of education-- sign language.


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