A child of books by Oliver Jeffers
Ill. by Sam Winston. Walker Books, 2016. ISBN 9781406358315
(Age: All) Highly recommended. Books. Classic stories. Every few
years a book comes along which extols the virtues of books and
reading, told in a way which initiates discussion and sharing,
illustrated so beautifully that everyone reading it will look at
the drawings more closely, stopping on each page to breathe in the
images presented. Children and adults alike will read and discuss
this book, taking time to share their reminiscences of books read
long ago or just yesterday, sharing their ideas on what makes a
classic, importuning others to read books they have read and
enjoyed.
Each page has text from a recognised classic story: Alice in
Wonderland, Treasure Island, The secret garden,
Gulliver's travels, Swiss family Robinson, Snow
White and Blood Red, Kidnapped are amongst the forty
or so mentioned. Each endpaper lists all these books, and will make
a wonderful list to begin thinking about what you would add, or discussing
with others what they might have put on the endpaper, or with a
class, brainstorming the sorts of books they would like to see
there. It is all down to personal experience with books, and many
will add a whole range of others they see as classics, and what
discussions will be had as a result!
The girl asks the boy to join her as she sails on a sea of words and
books, taking him on her voyage of the imagination, climbing
mountains, finding treasure in a cave, losing themselves in a
forest, escaping monsters, flying to the stars. All it takes is
imagination, and books hold the key offering this experience to all.
The stunning illustrations parallel the stories reflected by the
text, with mountains or seas of words holding the pair as they have
their adventure. Or the cave is made from a rockfall of words while
the forest overleaf is full of what seem like trees but are really
old fashioned books standing erect. The way Winston has used words
to illustrate the text will have readers turning the book every
which way to discover which book's lines have been used to create
the image. Even the houses on the last four pages turn into a shelf
of books. Just wonderful. This will be a treat for anyone who reads
it, the text and illustrations are beacons, leading to hours of
contemplation and discussion.
Fran Knight