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Fearlessly bold and gloriously girl-powered, Kate T. Parker's
Strong Is the New Pretty arrived, auspiciously, at a time when
empowerment for women of all ages is at the forefront of our
national conversation. An immediate bestseller, with strong sales
in adult and children's departments, it has reached more than
200,000 copies in print in under a year. For girls 8-12 who see
themselves in Parker's portraits, Strong Is the New Pretty: A
Guided Journal for Girls celebrates courage and individuality,
confidence, creativity, and joy, while building off the energy of
both the journaling trend and the tremendous wave of female-forward
storytelling. Illustrated throughout with favourite photographs
from the book (as well as 20 brand-new images), each page features
an inspiring, interactive prompt that encourages young girls to
write, sketch, and express themselves freely: Draw a picture of
yourself as a superhero - what is your superpower? Invent a new
language, and write down some translations here. What makes you
unique? List three things about you that make you different. This
is the first guided, fill-in journal just for girls (rather than
with their mums or sisters) that focuses specifically on strength.
As girls make their way through the book, it becomes a source of
motivation to be their most powerful selves, a personal keepsake to
revisit again and again, a time capsule to cherish for posterity.
Inspired by the popular photo project of the same title that went
viral in the spring of 2015, Strong Is the New Pretty is a
photo-driven book comprised of 100 high-quality black-and-white and
color images (with minimal text) of fierce and joyful girls--a
celebration of what it means to be strong (whether athletic,
bookish, brainy, brave, loyal, or courageous). The photographs
champion the message that girls are perfect in their imperfection;
beautiful in their chaotic, authentic lives; and empowered by their
strength instead of their looks. They are messy. They are loud.
Wild. Full of life. Adventurous. Silly. Funny. Strong.
In her international bestseller Strong Is the New Pretty (with
329,000 copies in print), the photographer Kate T. Parker changed
the way we see girls by showing us their truest selves - fearless,
messy, wild, stubborn, proud. Now it's time to talk about our boys.
Prompted by #metoo, school shootings, bullying, and other toxic
behaviour, there's a national conversation going on about what
defines masculinity and how to raise sons to become good people.
And Kate Parker is joining in by turning her lens to boys. The
result is possibly even more moving, more eloquent, more surprising
than Strong. The Heart of a Boy is a deeply felt celebration of
boyhood as it's etched in the faces and bodies of dozens of boys,
ages 5 to 18. There's the pensive look of a skateboarder caught in
a moment between rides. The years of dedication in a ballet
dancer's poise. The love of a younger brother hugging his older
brother. The unself-conscious joy of a goofy grin with a missing
tooth. The casual intimacy of two friends at a lemonade stand. The
shyness of a lone boy and his model boat. The intensity in a
football huddle. The proud, challenging gaze of a boy bald from
alopecia - and the same kind of gaze, but wreathed in tenderness,
of a boy a few years younger with flowing, almost waist-length
hair. There are guitarists, fencers, wrestlers, star-gazers, a
pilot - it's the world of our sons, in all their amazing variety
and difference. The photographs feel spontaneous, direct, and with
so much eye contact between the viewed and the viewer that it's
impossible to turn away. And throughout, words from the boys
themselves enrich every photo. What a gift for boys and anyone who
is raising them.
Life lessons from the soccer field, from the bestselling author of
Strong is the New Pretty. A bruised shin, a bloody nose. Racing
across the field into the arms of your teammates. Leaping high to
save a goal. Getting up at dawn to kick ball after ball into the
net. Making friends for life. Teaching your younger sister how to
dribble. Sharing cupcakes at practice on your birthday. Going to
sleep in your jersey. That’s what it means to be fearless,
dedicated, confident, resilient, proud, persistent. It doesn’t
matter whether you’re 3 or 63––that’s what it means to play
like a girl. “Kate T. Parker is my hero. She moves me. The whole
world she has created moves me.”––Drew Barrymore
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