Before I Grew Up

Before I Grew Up

$18.95

Written by John Miller

Illustrated by Giuliano Cucco

A Marginalian (formerly Brain Pickings) Best Children’s Book of 2021

Winner of Best Art Award, 2021 Northern Lights Book Awards

In this picture book, author John Miller weaves a story about unknown artist Giuliano Cucco from the paintings and sketches that he leaves behind. The pictures illustrating the story were selected from Cucco’s vast archive. Through luminescent, emotionally rich images, Miller tells of Cucco’s childhood—one of familial love and the freedom to dream—which carries him into the realization that one day, he will be an artist. An innovative picture book that begins with the paintings and leads into story, this book stands as a celebration of the vastness of the human spirit. It is also an ode to childhood and the flowering that is possible when we are cherished.

ISBN: 978-1-59270-361-6

11” (W) x 9” (H) • 60 pages • HCJ • Ages 6-10

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AWARDS AND REVIEWS

A Marginalian (formerly Brain Pickings) Loveliest Children’s Book of 2021

Winner of Best Art Award, 2021 Northern Lights Book Awards

“A stunning illustrated elegy of life, loss, our search for light, and loneliness as a crucible of creativity. An uncommonly original and tenderhearted celebration of how an artist becomes an artist… Miller set out to honor his friend [Cucco] by bringing his story to life — traveling back in time on the wings of memory and imagination, to the lush and lonesome childhood in which the artist’s gift was forged, projecting himself into the boy’s heart and mind through the grown man’s surviving paintings, blurring fact and fancy. Before I Grew Up [is] part elegy and part exultation, reverencing the vibrancy of life: the life of feeling and of the imagination, the life of landscape and of light, the life of nature and of the impulse for beauty that irradiates what is truest and most beautiful about human nature. In spare, lyrical first-person narrative spoken by the half-real, half-imagined boy becoming an artist, Miller invokes the spirit of Giuliano’s childhood. Emanating from it is the universal spirit of childhood. We feel the boy’s imaginative loneliness deepen when we encounter his father, brilliant and remote — ‘a scientist who studied where light came from — not sunlight, but another kind of light he said was inaccessible…’ One day, when the boy is twelve, his father rows out to the ocean to look for his invisible light and returns with a tale of water so calm that he stood up in his tippy row boat and played his violin. From this static scene depicted in one of Cucco’s real paintings, from the known facts of his friend’s life, in the voice of the boy about to be lit up by his creative calling, Miller’s soaring imagination conjures up a larger poetic truth about what it means to be an artist, about the meaning of love and the measure of enough, about the slender strands of assurance that weave the lifeline of the creative spirit.“ —Maria Popova, The Marginalian (formerly Brain Pickings)

“After hearing about Cucco’s death in 2006, Miller—who had previously collaborated with Cucco on two children’s books—linked a series of Cucco’s paintings to tell this first-person story about the artist’s childhood. Weaving together these heretofore-unconnected oil paintings, many of them deeply atmospheric and enigmatic, … this series of impressions—about Cucco’s childhood years, parents, moments in nature, dreams, life in the city before an eventual return to the country, and more— are highly textured and richly colored, many showcasing a vivid, sunny yellow. A thought-provoking conversation starter for art lovers of all ages.” —Kirkus Reviews

Before I Grew Up is a very unusual picture book... It tells the story of the Italian painter Giuliano Cucco’s childhood in the first person, but it is written by an old friend of his, John Miller… Looking through the late painter’s archive in Rome, Miller found a group of paintings related to Cucco’s childhood. He selected and arranged some of those pictures, complementing them with short, interpretive sentences. The alluring result is the imaginary life of the artist as a young boy, told through a sequence of lyrical scenes… Dreams and boats are recurrent themes in the story, as is light… This is not an easy book to summarize, and there are a number of fascinating and unexpected situations that are best left to the reader to experience directly.” —Sergio Ruzzier, The New York Times

This tribute of a picture book is one that celebrates the creativity of childhood and how allowing unfettered time and space allow that creativity to carry into adulthood. Miller uses his words as a minimal framework to offer a glimpse of the artist’s life and also to share his work. It is [Cucco’s] paintings that truly tell the story, sharing emotions through the art. From darker moments to those filled with inspiration and light. The art is whimsical at times, literal at others… A lovely surreal look at an artist, creativity and childhood.”—Tasha Saecker, Waking Brain Cells

“Miller has succeeded in offering a memorial to his friend by telling the story of how creativity is nurtured and developed. The haunting art does the rest of the job, encouraging readers to make up their own stories to go with the arresting images. Thought provoking and surrealistic in some places, evocative and strange in others.” —New York Journal of Books