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Marianna Coppo

    Marianna Coppo is an author and illustrator whose work delves into visual storytelling. Her art masterfully combines delicate linework with profound emotional resonance. Through her creations, she explores themes of identity, memory, and the intricate connections between individuals and their environment. Coppo's distinctive style is marked by a poetic sensibility and an ability to evoke powerful feelings with a single image.

    A Brave Cat
    A Very Late Story
    Thingamabob
    Ray
    Where's Randolph?
    Petra
    • 2024

      Featuring an engaging interactive format, this book invites readers to participate in a mind-reading experience with Lady Rabbit the Magician. As you select a character from the magician's audience, the story unfolds with surprises and magical twists, making each reading a unique adventure. Perfect for young readers, it combines storytelling with playful interaction, encouraging imagination and engagement.

      The Book That Can Read Your Mind
    • 2023

      Lift the flaps for a highly amusing hide-and-seek game! Randolph isn't very good at hide-and-seek, and where he thinks are the best hiding places will have young readers squeal with delight as they lift the flaps to find him. Where's Randolph? is an irresistible board book; children will want to play hide-and-seek with Randolph again and again! * Fun family read-aloud books * Books for children aged 0 to 3 * Books for toddlers and preschool children

      Where's Randolph?
    • 2023

      Fish and Crab

      • 48 pages
      • 2 hours of reading

      Crab wants to sleep, but Fish is full of "what if" worries, so Crab tells him to list them all--but then it is Crab who cannot sleep.

      Fish and Crab
    • 2023

      The Best Bad Day Ever, from award-winning author-illustrator Marianna Coppo, is a hilarious and heartwarming story about grumpiness and the power of friendship.

      The Best Bad Day Ever
    • 2022

      A boy sets off to draw a mountain in this thoughtful exploration of art and the creative process. For fans of Hike by Pete Oswald.A little boy, who is a keen artist, becomes obsessed with a mountain he can see from his house. One day, he tries to draw the mountain, but his drawing doesn't look anything like it, so he decides that he has to take a closer look. He sets off with his dog, drawing what he sees along the way, and making a growing collection of animal companions during his hike. But when he finally reaches the mountain, the boy makes a discovery about the importance of perspective and friendship which changes how he views the world around him.Both a powerful exploration of art and a sweet ode to hiking, this picture book from acclaimed author-illustrator Marianna Coppo and her partner, Mario Bellini, will inspire readers young and old to stop and take the time to appreciate both the world around them and others who inhabit it.

      The Boy And The Mountain
    • 2022

      A Brave Cat

      • 48 pages
      • 2 hours of reading
      3.8(258)Add rating

      "Olivia, an indoor cat, is a fearless explorer until she accidentally finds herself outside, which tests her adventurous sense of self and results in a brave new outlook."

      A Brave Cat
    • 2022

      Thingamabob

      • 40 pages
      • 2 hours of reading
      3.8(152)Add rating

      What is a thingamabob? A thingamabob can be anything . . . and so can you! A sweet, empowering picture book about self-discovery from the acclaimed author-illustrator of Petra .In the beginning, the universe was one great big thing. Then that thing exploded into gobs and gobs of thingamabobs.All of the thingamabobs had a purpose . . . all except for one small, shapeless thingamabob. No one knew what it was for. It wasn't this or that. It wasn't here or there. What's the use of this thingamabob?But everything changes for Thingamabob when it makes a friend in the park. And Thingamabob realizes that if you aren't one thing . . . you can be everything!

      Thingamabob
    • 2020

      Buzz is a very good boy, who lives in a fancy house, eats well, and has equally well-behaved (boring) friends--but sometimes he would really like to break free, run fast, dig holes, and play with the other dogs.

      Such a Good Boy
    • 2020

      Ray

      • 40 pages
      • 2 hours of reading
      3.9(428)Add rating

      A humorous picture book about the adventures of a light bulb who embarks on an enlightening journey, from the acclaimed author-illustrator of Petra.At the end of the hall, near the staircase, is a closet. In that closet lives Ray, who is a light bulb. Ray spends most of his time in darkness, which is pretty boring if you don't know how to fill it. So boring that Ray usually slips into a dreamless sleep . . .Everything changes one day when Ray is migrated into a portable lantern and taken on the trip of a lifetime. He wakes up in a much larger closet (the outside), surrounded by incredible things - too many to count! Everything is super big, and Ray has never felt so small. And in the morning, Ray makes an incredible discovery which will change his life forever.Meet Ray, a charming new character from the imaginative mind of Marianna Coppo, the creator of Petra!

      Ray
    • 2018

      “. . . a head-spinning yet easygoing lesson in finding your own voice, and your own fun.”–The New York Times An offbeat story about adventure and creativity featuring a cast of quirky self aware picture book characters. Have you ever opened a book, only to discover that the characters inside already know they're inside of one? All that's left for them to do now is wait for the story to arrive, but it's certainly taking its time in getting here. This cleverly self-aware, interactive picture book, loosely based on Waiting For Godot, introduces a charming cast of characters illustrated in Marianna Coppo's quirky and delicate style. Young readers will learn that instead of waiting around for stories to happen, they should go out into the world and create their own! Perfect for fans of The Monster at the End of this Book and The Book with No Pictures.

      A Very Late Story