Book Descriptions
for Dizzy by Jonah Winter and Sean Qualls
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
“This is the story of one real cool cat who must have been born with a horn in his hands . . . ” Readers of this picture book biography of Dizzy Gillespie quickly learn that there was no horn at Dizzy’s birth. His early childhood was hard-edged. He was beaten at home and beaten on the streets. But when he finally did pick up a trumpet, “He took all the anger he felt inside and blasted it out through the end of his horn . . . until he was ROARING. He was SOARING.” Jonah Winter’s inspired, remarkably in-depth writing chronicles Dizzy’s rise to the heights of the jazz world. He was a jokester and he was a visionary, ready to rewrite the rules of jazz, teaching other musicians to play “notes that no one had used yet.” Sean Qualls’s equally inspired art captures the chaos and emotions that inspired Dizzy, as well as the passion and energy of his music. (Ages 7–10)
CCBC Choices 2007 . © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2007. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
This is the story of Dizzy Gillespie, a real cool cat who must have been born with a horn in his hands, judging from the way he played the trumpet. Jazz was his ticket on a train to better days, and he left his hard life in a small town for New York City and the hottest band around. But did Dizzy stand straight and play right? No! He was a clown. He hit high notes, low notes, never-been-heard notes, and before he knew it, Dizzy created a whole new music: Bebop. This is a story about a boy who breaks all the rules -- and finds his own personal heaven along the way.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.