December 30, 2024

AASL December Column, Part II

AASL Column

AASL December Column, Part II

Barret Havens and Barbara Opar, column editors

Column by Barbara Opar, Librarian for Architecture, Syracuse University Libraries

Through the Eyes of a Child

King+King Architecture Library display, December 2024

Sharing with you part 2 of this month’s AASL Column which is devoted to the theme of architecture books—to give, to receive and hopefully to enjoy for a long time to come. When I prepared part 1 of the column, I was remiss in considering an important audience—children. Yes, adult architects and educators need and love books.  It has been said: “Books entertain us, expand us, spark the imagination, and expose us to new worlds.  A child can find themselves—present and future—amongst the pages of a great story.  Looking out from there, anything seems possible.” (https://archinect.com/features/article/103117101/never-too-young-15-librarian-recommended-architecture-books-for-young-children)

Let’s look at some of the possibilities. One of the best-known and admired writers of children’s books is David Macaulay. A graduate of RISD, Macaulay’s books all have a touch of whimsy. His books are so well-designed and researched that many of them have been used in adult art and architectural history courses. Consider: Mosque. (New York, NY: Clarion Books, 2003.)

While Macaulay’s works focus on accuracy with respect to the depiction of building details, other architects have either retold traditional tales or provided noteworthy illustrations.

In the 1990s, Rizzoli Classics included:  Stern, Robert A.M. The House That Bob Built. New York, NY: Rizzoli International Publications, Inc, 1991.

The possibilities are endless. Notable examples include: Koponen, Libby. The House that Baba Built: An Artist’s Childhood in China. Boston, MA : Little, Brown, and Company, 2011.

Parra, John. Growing an Artist: The Story of a Landscaper and His Son. New York, NY : Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division, 2022.

Swanson, Susan Marie. The House in the Night. Boston, MA : Houghton Mifflin Company, 2008.

A research guide from my library highlights more such imaginative titles: https://researchguides.library.syr.edu/c.php?g=978052&p=10713883

Check out your public library for curated collections of children’s books sure to inspire. Remember though, academic libraries often collect noteworthy titles, especially Caldecott Medal Winners or Newberry Award Winners. Buy or borrow, but look to books now and into the future to instill a sense of wonder in the children around you.