Rap a Tap Tap: Here's Bojangles - Think of That!

by Diane Dillon (Author) Diane Dillon (Illustrator)

Reading Level: K − 1st Grade

"There once was a man who danced in the street / He brought pleasure and joy to the people he'd greet / He didn't just dance, he made art with his feet / Rap a tap tap--think of that!"

This simple book for young children has the added bonus of describing the life of a ground-breaking African-American tap dancer. Bill "Bojangles" Robinson was one of the most popular entertainers of the 1920s-30s. People said he "talked with his feet," and in the Dillons' graceful paintings of old New York, he dances from page to page to the tune of a toe-tapping rhyme. Rap a tap tap--think of that!

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Hardcover
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Kirkus Review - Children

Starred Review
This jazzy introduction to an important contributor to American culture will entrance the youngest music and dance fans.

Booklist

This fancy-free introduction captures the ebullience of [Bojangles'] dancing as well as the way he touched audiences.

Publishers Weekly

Starred Review
In a departure from their recognizable illustration style, the versatile husband-and-wife team here uses a striking gouache painting technique that pays homage to Harlem Renaissance artist Aaron Douglas to craft an exuberant picture-book tribute to African-American tap dancer Bill "Bojangles" Robinson (1878-1949). Brief, rhyming text introduces the tall, lean and dapper man who "danced in the street" and "made art with his feet." In keeping with tapdancing tradition, each line of verse returns to a rhythmic refrain ("Rap a tap tap think of that!"). The deceptively simple text conveys the complexities of the era: "He danced past doors; some were open, some closed" accompanies a montage of entryways, with some people welcoming Robinson, but a white man closing his door. On the other hand "folks in fancy clothes" depicts whites and blacks together outside a show. Most spreads exude the everyday joys of a bustling city neighborhood, and the bouncy beat will hold the attention of even youngest readers. A short biographical note appears at the end of the book. The cubed-looking apartment buildings, an elevated/subway train, store fronts and traffic lights suggest Manhattan (eagle-eye readers will notice an obscured sign for 125th Street), but the scenes are general enough to lend the art a universal, timeless feel. The Dillons cleverly depict Robinson's fast-flying feet with varying shades of the same color around his legs, creating a sense of movement with a shadow/silhouette effect. The graceful figure he cuts on the page is a hoofer's delight. Ages 3-up. (Sept.) Copyright 2002 Publishers Weekly Used with permission.

Review quotes

 
Diane Dillon
Leo & Diane Dillon are two of the most acclaimed illustrators of our time. They collaborated for more than five decades. Their long list of awards includes two Caldecott Medals, the NAACP Image Award, five Coretta Scott King Awards and Honors, four Boston Globe-Horn Book Awards, and induction into the Society of Illustrators Hall of Fame. Leo and Diane created award-winning picture books, book covers, magazines, and other art until Leo's death in 2012. Love and the Rocking Chair is their final collaboration. Diane Dillon lives in Brooklyn, New York.
Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780590478830
Lexile Measure
360
Guided Reading Level
9
Publisher
Blue Sky Press
Publication date
September 20, 2002
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV000000 - Juvenile Fiction | General
Library of Congress categories
Dance
African Americans
Stories in rhyme
Tap dancing
Dancers
Robinson, Bill
Coretta Scott King Award
Honor Book 2003 - 2003
Parents Choice Award (Fall) (1998-2007)
Winner 2002 - 2002
Georgia Children's Book Award
Nominee 2006 - 2006

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