Limonero
Limonero is an independent Argentine imprint committed on publishing illustrated books. Founded in 2014, Limonero publishes works that are imaginative and innovative both visually and textually.
View Rights PortalLimonero is an independent Argentine imprint committed on publishing illustrated books. Founded in 2014, Limonero publishes works that are imaginative and innovative both visually and textually.
View Rights PortalFounded in 2014 by Lulu Kirschenbaum and Manuel Rud, Limonero publishes works that are imaginative and innovative both visually and textually. The drive behind Limonero has always been to build a catalog of titles that we consider indispensible to readers little and large, to bring the illustrated book to readers of all ages. Among other awards and mentions, Limonero received the prestigious BOP Prize, the award for Best Latin American Publisher, at the 2019 Bologna Children’s Book Fair.
View Rights PortalA boy tells his little brother-on-the-way of all he hopes for when the baby comes and everything that has transpired leading up to the birth. A book that—from the funny, ingenuous and Frank point of view of the impatient little narrator—delves deeply into questions of time, change and family relationships.
There is a thingy in a place. A thingy that has been there for a long, long time. Or, maybe, for just a little while. Some pass by and see it. They are surprised, or angry, or they ignore it. Some try to explain it. The rings of the Queen, a blind pastry, an old telephone, and even a dead hen… Everyone has something to say about this thingy that does nothing and is just there. Is the thingy all of this? Is it something else? Or is there nothing?
A cedar tree grows in a wood. It is cut down, and from its wood comes the pencil in this story. The pencil is passed along, from a shop in Canada all the way to a table in a Buenos Aires café. In each place it finds its owner for a time: a prisoner planning an escape, a student in love, a traveling architect, a portrait artist who works in a hotel. Finally, moved along by the force of chance or destiny, it comes into the possession of a writer who tells us of this apparently haphazard journey, which is no more—and no less—than the life of a pencil.
Do you know what sheep count to fall asleep? Flowers. One sunflower, two roses, three geraniums, four jasmines, and so on. They also tell stories about rhinoceroses, airplanes, rainbows and other sheep who live far away. Sometimes later, when they’re asleep, they have nightmares, and sometimes they fly freely among blue, purple, green and white dreams.
Some objects have other lives besides the common, ordinary ones. Certain people know about these secret, magic existences, and they know just what it is that objects have to tell about. One person like that is the girl in this book, who little by little becomes aware of the story that lives hidden in the heart of a spoon.
The elevator should go down, but it goes up. Who called it? Is it broken? Six neighbors meet in what would usually be a routine encounter. But this time old stories are told and new friends are made. All trips transform us, even a trip in an elevator.
In a small village with no school or library in the 1950s, a girl befriends a man who lives shut up in his house. He lends her books, and she tells him of the world outside—about birds, plants, flowers and the stream that gives the village its name. The girl falls in love with the stories in the books, and little by little the man loses his fear.
What does a writer do when writing? What does a reader do when reading? Does imagination mean “anything goes”? Minutes that splash, tigers that twinkle, keyboards that sneak a peek, trains that change their socks… So, does that happen or doesn’t it? An illustrated poem about the ways of the imagination and the creative power of words.
A gardener is forced to retire. Old and without work, he is very unhappy and ready to give up on life. But before he is lost in time and his garden, a little girl visits him. She reminds him of his youth and brings him new life. Júbilo: romance del jardinero is a narrative poem in an album book with rich, lively illustrations. This is Andrea Pizarro Clemo’s first book.
Sometimes we face life head on, and other times we see it from only one side. Sometimes we watch it through the window, from a balcony or from safely behind enormous sunglasses. There are times when we see it in little squares and others when it’s tinted all rosy. At one time or another, we’ve all looked at what’s around us from some peculiar point of view. But… Have you ever asked yourself what it would be like to see life from inside a zebra?
Para salvar su vida, un hombre decide salvar la de los demás.Una solitaria mujer recibe las esperanzadoras cartas de un admirador secreto.Padre e hijo viajan al pasado con una caja de cenizas en las manos.Un músico ciego recorre a tientas un pequeño pueblo del interior.Un poeta ignoto le entrega el más valioso regalo al hombre que lo iluminó con sus palabras.Un grupo de niños planean un mágico rescate.Un abuelo, su nieto y un perro ven lo que el río devuelve a los hombres, mientras los pájaros callan. En los siete cuentos de este libro, Horacio Cavallo construye un mundo de particular sensibilidad gracias a la calidad sugestiva de su prosa. Las vidas de los personajes que habitan ese mundo son antiguas, vidas que han llegado a un punto en el que un solo gesto de bondad, de sencilla ternura, puede devolverles una parte de su fuerza original. Mucho tiempo después de que el lector haya abandonado estas páginas, esos personajes continuarán en su memoria, buscando nuevas oportunidades de redención, y, quizá, encontrándolas. Un nuevo relato se añade a los siete que conformaban la primera edición de este volumen. Se trata de «El sabor de la nieve», originalmente publicado en el libro colectivo Exposición múltiple (Alter Ediciones, 2015), un texto que, además de ser una prodigiosa muestra de técnica narrativa, alcanza una gran hondura emotiva y se ubica entre las mejores piezas breves del autor. El nuevo conjunto amplía así los márgenes de su universo simbólico y ofrece nuevas posibilidades de diálogos cruzados. Cabe señalar que luego de obtener el Premio Nacional de Narrativa Édita del Ministerio de Educación y Cultura en 2015, varios de los relatos de este libro han formado parte de antologías en diversas lenguas.