Cover of book shows African American man in foreground, Museum of African American History and Culture in backgroun

What does it take to build a dream? Kelly Starling Lyons’ picture book biography Dream Builder: The Story of Architect Philip Freelon explores that question.

Lyons structures Dream Builder around the steps necessary to build a building. She explores Vision, Foundation, Frame, Form, and Dream. We see how each of these ideas led to Freelon becoming an architect. At the same time, we see how each of these ideas leads to the buildings he creates.

The story also explores Freelon’s learning disability. He had many strengths in school. But reading was difficult for him. I think kids with similar struggles will love this book.

I was also interested to learn about Freelon’s attitudes about what he was willing to design. The book explains that “He will not design prisons or casinos.”

Freelon himself wrote an afterword for the book just weeks before he passed away in 2019. And Lyons has an interesting author’s note about how she came to the project.

You can read about Kelly Starling Lyons here.

You can look at more of the illustrator’s art here.

Dream Builder: The Story of Architect Philip Freelon by Kelly Starling Lyons, illustrated by Laura Freeman (Lee & Low: 2020).

Image shows a tree growing from a book and reads Nonfiction Picture Book Challenge 2020

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Frank Lloyd Wright stands on a rock, observing a waterfall.I loved Fallingwater, Marc Harshman and Anna Egan Smucker’s picture book account of Frank Lloyd Wright’s design of the iconic house.

One of the astonishing things about the book is that it doesn’t even pretend to start with the sources of inspiration in Wright’s childhood. Instead, the first spread shows an old, discouraged, gray-haired man. “Once upon a time…Frank Lloyd Wright was the most famous architect in the world. But by 1934 he was just old. Someone even said he was dead!” The book doesn’t, however, try to show that the design of Fallingwater was Wright’s attempt to reclaim his place in architecture circles–though the back matter makes that argument. Instead, it focuses on his design process.

We see Wright meet with his client, visit the building site (multiple times), and think about the project. Spread after spread after spread. Finally, when a deadline looms, he puts pencil to paper and starts to draw the plans.

I love this glimpse into one artist’s process. I can imagine great conversations with kids about how his process might connect to their own process of writing.

The art by LeUyen Pham is astonishing. The text is wholly focused on Wright, but the illustrations add lots of detail about the reactions of the people around Wright–his staff, his client, the workers on the site. I love the layers that they add to the story. And they are simply beautiful all by themselves, too.

The back matter has essays by the authors and the illustrator as well as notes and sources, and some great links to videos about Fallingwater. This book gives you multiple ways to keep exploring the topic.

Fallingwater: The Building of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Masterpiece by March Harshman and Anna Egan Smucker, illustrated by LeUyen Pham. Roaring Brook Press: 2017.

Picture of children surrounding a globe

Alyson Beecher hosts the Nonfiction Picture Book Challenge at kidlitfrenzy.com. Visit there for more great nonfiction picture books!

Today I’m reading picture book biographies of two trail-blazing female artists: Zaha Hadid, an architect; and Amalia Hernandez, a dancer

The World Is Not a Rectangle introduced me to Zaha Hadid.

I loved learning about this architect I’d never heard of, and found myself falling down an Internet rabbit hole of looking at her designs!

The book starts with her childhood in Baghdad, Iraq, where she explored the countryside, thought about ancient cities, and lived with Persian carpets. We follow her to London and get a glimpse of her architectural training and then see her set up shop as an architect, making design after design that is not built. But “Hadid means iron in Arabic, and Zaha is strong as iron. She keeps on working–one plan after another. ‘I made a conscious decision not to stop.'”

And eventually her persistence pays off. In the most wonderful pages of the book, Winter draws the buildings Hadid designed, with their flowing, organic shapes, next to the natural features that inspired her designs.

I loved reading Danza! by Duncan Tonatiuh not because it was unknown but because it was about such a very familiar institution–ElCover of Danza! shows Mexican folk dancers Ballet Folklorico de Mexico. When I was an exchange student in Mexico, we of course went to a performance, and I have seen similar dances in the United States. But I had never known about the passionate dancer behind the institution: Amalia Hernandez.

The book tells the story of Hernandez’ early dance training and how that eventually led her to looking for a way to put traditional Mexican dances on the stage. Tonatiuh’s art is spot-on for this project. His profile characters and the carefully detailed costumes he puts on them, along with the set and stage details he includes capture my memory of that night when I watched El Ballet Folklorico better than any photographs I’ve ever seen.

I loved the extra details he shares in the back matter–including the controversy over the way some people saw her as appropriating folk dances.

The World Is Not a Rectangle: A Portrait of Architect Zaha Hadid by Jeanette Winter. Beach Lane Books: 2017.

Danza! Amalia Hernandez and El Ballet Folklorico de Mexico by Duncan Tonatiuh. Abrams: 2017.

Children with book around a globe

I participate every Wednesday in the Nonfiction Picture Book Challenge at Kid Lit Frenzy.