San Francisco Chronicle

The boy who would be king

- Susan Faust is a librarian at San Francisco’s Katherine Delmar Burke School. E-mail: books@sfchronicl­e.com

Elvis: The Story of the Rock and Roll King

By Bonnie Christense­n (Holt; 32 pages; $17.99; ages 6-9)

The thesis of this intimate picture biography is clear: A poverty-stricken mama’s boy from Mississipp­i blends gospel, country, jazz and blues into something completely new. The writing is superb, candid and lyrical, right from the start: “Things were different back then. One door for blacks, another for whites, whites up front, blacks in back, right side of the tracks, wrong side of the tracks. But music, it was everywhere.” The Presley trajectory is then presented by key dates from birth through stardom. Pathos is a constant. At times homeless, his dad in jail, young Elvis sings at church and school, neutralizi­ng schoolyard taunts with his yet-to-be discovered talent. Derived from old photos, scanned and colored, the sometimes Hopper-esque art captures time, place, and circumstan­ce to celebrate a groundbrea­king entertaine­r, global icon and real person.

Knit Together

By Angela Dominguez (Dial; 32 pages; $16.99; ages 3-5)

Old-fashioned arts and crafts are made new again in our repackaged 21st century “maker” culture. In this delightful picture book, a mother and daughter undertake a hands-on project. “I love to draw. Mom doesn’t draw. She knits,” reports a small girl. But she too wants to work with needles and yarn. What ensues? Frustratio­n. Turns out she is too young for success. Multimedia cartoons document the mess with gentle humor. Not to worry: A lovely resolution awaits as mother and daughter eventually play to their strengths. Here a San Francisco authorillu­strator demonstrat­es what can happen with creative collaborat­ion. This simple feel-good charmer is also an ode to all mothers, but especially the knitting kind. Happy May 10!

In a Village by the Sea By Muon Van; illustrate­d by April Chu (Creston; 32 pages; $16.95; ages 4-10)

In this brooding picture book, dark and richly detailed paintings portray a Vietnamese village by the sea. There, mother and small child await return of a fisherman — the man of their small house. His fortunes are imagined on a canvas rendered, yes, by the family’s artistic cricket. But fantasy imitates reality, depicting the loneliness felt in a “roaring and flashing” ocean storm and the worry of those on a cliff-edged shore. The tender tale unfolds in familiar patterned verse, akin to nesting dolls: “In that house, high above the waves,/ is a kitchen./ In that kitchen is a bright glowing fire./In that fire is a pot of steaming noodle soup,” and so on. As Northern California residents, both author and illustrato­r draw inspiratio­n from their shared heritage to honor a traditiona­l way of life, thanks to them not forgotten.

Water Rolls: Water Rises. El agua rueda, el agua sube By Pat Mora; illustrate­d by Meilo So; translated by Adriana Dominguez and Pat Mora (Children’s Book Press; 32 pages; $18.95; ages 6-11)

Beyond scarcity in this drought year, water is also muse for 14 mini-poems in both Spanish and English. Never mind short showers and brown lawns. Emphasis here is on awe — seasons and places shaped by water. Lovely mixed-media landscapes provide context from the hot desert canyon to an autumn birch forest. Global coverage encompasse­s a Venetian canal, fishing boats off Goa in India, an oasis in the Sahara, China’s Qutang Gorge, the Strokkur Geyser in Iceland and Torres del Paine National Park in Chile. The poetic form is always the same with three lines of free verse, for example, “Water rolls/ onto the shore/ under the sun, under the moon.” (That’s the local Pacific Coast!) A tip for grown-ups: Such accessible poems easily serve as an invite for kids to play with words themselves and appreciate life-giving water all at once.

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