新品:
¥4,115¥4,115 税込
お届け日 (配送料: ¥16
):
4月10日 - 20日
発送元: SuichuBook 販売者: SuichuBook
中古品: ¥739

無料のKindleアプリをダウンロードして、スマートフォン、タブレット、またはコンピューターで今すぐKindle本を読むことができます。Kindleデバイスは必要ありません。
ウェブ版Kindleなら、お使いのブラウザですぐにお読みいただけます。
携帯電話のカメラを使用する - 以下のコードをスキャンし、Kindleアプリをダウンロードしてください。
Safari: A Photicular Book ハードカバー – イラスト付き, 2012/10/16
購入オプションとあわせ買い
Animals in living motion, as real as if you were there. The cheetah bounds, the lion charges. The African elephant snaps its ears.
Using unique Photicular technology, Safari is the adventure of a lifetime, and a book unlike any other.
Experience it for yourself.
- 本の長さ32ページ
- 言語英語
- 出版社Workman Publishing Company
- 発売日2012/10/16
- 寸法20.96 x 5.08 x 20.96 cm
- ISBN-100761163808
- ISBN-13978-0761163800
よく一緒に購入されている商品

この商品をチェックした人はこんな商品もチェックしています
商品の説明
レビュー
"Shots of cheetahs, rhinos, and gazelles spring to life as the pages turn."
—Entertainment Weekly
“An imaginative interpretation of the real thing.”
—Audubon magazine
"Lenticular technology takes a big leap forward with this virtual safari."
—PW magazine
“AMAZING! The safari comes to life with each turn of the page.”
—Jennifer Holland, bestselling author of Unlikely Friendships
“Lenticular technology takes a big leap forward with this virtual safari.”
―PW magazine
―Entertainment Weekly“Shots of cheetahs, rhinos, and gazelles spring to life as the pages turn.”
―Entertainment Weekly
―Audubon magazine“An imaginative interpretation of the real thing.”
―Audubon magazine
抜粋
Dan Kainen
My grandfather was an inventor, my father was an artist, and as a boy, I loved performing magic. So I like to think that these Photicular images are a direct result of generational influences, merging innovation, art, and magic.
Photicular imaging is an old technology—“lenticular,” or “integrated” photography, done in a new way. Individual video frames are sliced into very thin, adjacent strips to create one master-image. On its own, it just looks blurry, as if all the images were overlapped, but slide a sheet of thin lenses over the master-image—and it comes alive in fluid, film-like motion.
The beauty of an animal moving is another kind of magic that has fascinated me since childhood: the thrilling grace of a cheetah as it streaks across the grassland, the incongruous gentleness of a fierce-looking silverback gorilla quietly chewing plants, or the delicate gait of a young zebra trotting across the savanna. (The Jungle Book and Man-Eaters of Kumaon were early favorites.) As Carol Kaufmann recounts in her essay, which opens this book, there is nothing more powerful than watching an animal in its natural habitat. That’s why a safari seemed like a natural fit for the first Photicular book. For those unable to make the trip to Africa, I offer these images as a glimpse into the thrill of a safari and the astonishing sight of an animal in motion.
SAFARI
Carol Kaufmann
As the 10-seater plane approaches the dirt landing strip in the northwest corner of Masai Mara, Kenya’s 583-square-mile national reserve along the Tanzanian border, a giraffe is waiting. The plane touches down, rolls closer, but the giraffe—a big male about two stories tall—doesn’t move. He simply stares at the plane as the pilot veers to avoid him. A jolt comes not only from the rough landing on the bare earth, but from the shock of seeing that first animal in the wild, and at such close range.
Another surprise: refreshments on arrival, arrayed on a red tablecloth. The crew from our camp is there to greet us. “Welcome to the Mara!” says Milka our hostess, her white smile brilliant. “Champagne?” Not just yet. The small-plane flight and giraffe standoff have left me unsure of my footing. Salty banana chips prove soothing.
Milka introduces us to our guide, James, a quiet, dignified man in his 30s, dressed neatly in a pressed khaki collared shirt and shorts. He’s a Maasai, and his village stands atop an escarpment that borders one side of the Mara. His face is polished ebony, his voice soft and steady, his English lilting, lyrical. His kind eyes make me feel safe, happy. We learn that James is his Christian name. Maasai choose one for themselves when they go to school. His given name is Massek, he tells us. We begin to call him that instead. This makes him smile.
Massek helps us into an olive-colored Land Cruiser, a rugged-looking vehicle with no doors or windows. Thick metal roll bars hold up a canvas. Plump tsetse flies stick to the roof above my head. I hit the canvas and they fly off. Who knows if they’re carriers for the sleeping sickness. In spite of the inoculations I got before traveling here—six shots in total—nothing will prevent that dreaded disease.
Massek takes off along the bumpy road. More like a country lane, it’s dirt, dotted with jagged rocks and large, smooth stones. The deep potholes and crevices, left over from the rains, cause us to jiggle and jostle. First timers clutch the thick poles. Will the combination of jet lag, caffeine, motion sickness, and malaria pills require us to pull over?
Thankfully not.
How could it? Every sense is so completely engaged and overstimulated, curiosity operating on overdrive, that my brain doesn’t have time to notice something might be wrong inside.
En route to camp, we hear of a leopard spotting. A glimpse of the secretive leopard is a prize, even for seasoned guides. The cat, nearly invisible in the dappled afternoon light, picks the moment we drive up to emerge from beneath a bush. He walks in front of the vehicle and, for just a moment, stares into our faces before running off, out of sight.
Even Massek is visibly excited. He tells us this chance sighting portends good things for the journey. We haven’t even checked into our room.
Tent, rather. We arrive at camp and are led to a living room–size, thick canvas tent on a platform built about a foot off the ground. Inside, the beds are actual beds—not cots or sleeping bags—and are covered with soft cotton sheets and thick, white duvets. The walk-in slate-lined shower contains soaps, sugar scrubs, and shampoos laced with herbs. Large bottles of mineral water stand ready on the double-sink vanity. Beyond the zipped-up mosquito netting, we have a private patio complete with leather club chairs that look out onto the savanna. Commuter traffic and busy sidewalks lined with rectangular buildings seem very far away.
著者について
While working with some of the pioneers of holography, Dan created a special spotlight that was used by Soho’s Museum of Holography to light holograms. The related field of holography led to Dan’s interest in lenticular art and, in turn, after nearly a decade of research and experimentation, to the creation of his “Motion Viewer,” his third patent in that field and the inspiration for Safari and the other Photicular books.
Carol Kaufmann is the author of 97 Ways to Make a Cat Like You and co-author of the bestselling Photicular books Safari, Ocean, and Polar (Oct. 2015). A freelance writer and editor, her work for National Geographic and other publications has taken her to all corners of the globe, from the Pacific Ocean’s floor to the top the Atlas Mountains. In addition to National Geographic, her writing has appeared in the New York Times’ Draft column, Reader’s Digest, where she was the National Affairs Reporter, The Washington Post, George, and in the anthology A Woman’s Europe. She is also the author of the ebook, MamaTricks. She lives in Alexandria, Virginia.
登録情報
- 出版社 : Workman Publishing Company; Illustrated版 (2012/10/16)
- 発売日 : 2012/10/16
- 言語 : 英語
- ハードカバー : 32ページ
- ISBN-10 : 0761163808
- ISBN-13 : 978-0761163800
- 寸法 : 20.96 x 5.08 x 20.96 cm
- Amazon 売れ筋ランキング: - 60,948位洋書 (洋書の売れ筋ランキングを見る)
- - 23位Biology of Mammals
- - 60位African Travel Guides
- - 61位Fauna (洋書)
- カスタマーレビュー:
著者について
著者の本をもっと発見したり、よく似た著者を見つけたり、著者のブログを読んだりしましょう
著者の本をもっと発見したり、よく似た著者を見つけたり、著者のブログを読んだりしましょう
-
トップレビュー
上位レビュー、対象国: 日本
レビューのフィルタリング中に問題が発生しました。後でもう一度試してください。
よく調べずに購入した為、日本語版がある事を後から知りちょっとショックでした。
子供は大喜びで動物を動かしているので仕掛け絵本としての評価は星5だと思います。
ちなみに某会員制スーパーにも売っていました。
あと、海外のリサイクル本なので、中に英語で子供が書いたと覚しきらくがきがされていたのですが、マイナスには全く感じず、むしろ異国の子供達もこの本を楽しんだのかなと想像できて嬉しかったです。
動物が驚くほどスムーズに動くので子供も驚きつつ大喜びで毎日飽きずにめくって絵本を眺めています。
最近はpcやiPadやスマホで簡単に動画を見せること、確かに容易く可能ですね。
でも現代人は機器が発達したが故に記憶力や知能が低下しているとニュースで見ました。
気になった事はパソコンやiPadで調べてEnter押せば答えが出てきます。
得ることの出来る情報量は多いだろうけどあまりに簡単に答えを導き出せるのでその結果を必要なくなればすぐに忘れ自分で考えるまでもないので想像力も乏しくなって行く。
でも「図鑑」が、「本」が、まるで魔法のように動く事、本来なら動かないものが動く事、子供にとってどっちが想像力を育て好奇心を育むか。
どんなに機器が発達しても本を自分でめくって見ること、調べることは勉強の基礎であり大切な事だと思います。
確かに収録されている動物は少ないけれど子供にとっては宝物になった一冊です。
何度もめくり喜んでました
絶対、お薦めです
しかし、最初は興味を示すも、意外と早く(数十分)飽きた感じ??子供はそんなものですかね。
親は興味を示していました。
が、英語の説明文に悪戦苦闘。TOEIC600点クラスの友人ですが、辞書が必要でした。
絵本の割にはやや学術的な説明文が付いているので、英語が苦手(嫌い)な人に贈るのは慎重になったほうが良いかもしれません。
しかけ絵本としては私も友人も納得の内容で、新しモノ好きな人にはお勧めです。
『ホログラムでここまで出来るんだぁ』と感心しました。
他の国からのトップレビュー

Now I give lots of scanimation books as presents to kids.






2018年10月2日にブラジルでレビュー済み
