Review:
... a powerfully affecting, deeply moving book that speaks to people of all ages... This sublime picture book offers a heartfelt message of caring, connectedness, love and hope; it's one to treasure. -- Jill Bennett * Red Reading Hub * ... an emotional but delightful book to read. It raises many questions and is put together so well... This book would make a great read to explore within school settings. It would also make a gorgeous gift. * Mamma Filz blog * 'I am the lullaby/ you are the melody/ sing me'. These opening words introduce Pea Pod Lullaby, a gentle but thought-provoking hymn to how we should live in harmony, connecting with each other and caring for our world. Glenda Millard and Stephen Michael King both acknowledge that the original idea for the lullaby was inspired by a Leonard Cohen song, and conceived when contributing to a publication to raise money for the Royal Melbourne Children's Hospital Children's Cancer Centre. This story is sadly all too familiar today: a mother and her children, one a newborn, and their dog flee a war-ravaged land by boat. They journey over the sea to a new beginning. Along the way they welcome a lost polar bear ironically adrift on an empty refrigerator. Deeply evocative, the story can be interpreted as a metaphor for the many difficult and dangerous journeys we might need to take during a lifetime. Themes of courage and resilience are reflected alongside the need to trust and support one another and hold out hope against seemingly insurmountable odds. This picture book is a seamless collaboration between words and image: beautifully crafted, carefully positioned minimalist couplets overlay the rich and lyrical watercolours that convey much of the narrative. Each image uses colour and light skilfully and each opening depicts different possibilities that can be explored at length and revisited many times. Other literary journeys are alluded to (for example, The Owl and the Pussycat). Interestingly, although we might initially assume it is the mother who is singing to her baby, the 'you' consistently supports or nurtures the 'I' suggesting it is also the baby's lullaby ('I am the small green pea you are the tender pod; I am the diving kite you are the bow-tied tail'). At the same time the choice of 'you' ensures the reader is directly addressed throughout this meditation. While outwardly calm and reflective, this haunting and inspirational picture book is a deeply layered, eloquent exploration of different kinds of love, including the love for a mother and her child, care for the creatures who share our world and deep respect and concern for our environment. * Judge's citation * Glenda Millard's words are perfection. Not a single word is wasted and she captures the responsibility we all have for people who put their lives in our hands. -- Louise Nettleton * Book Murmuration blog * I love everything about Pea Pod Lullaby. The story works on three levels. It could be a lullaby, a simple tale about a family that sails from one place to another, or a metaphor for the journeys faced by displaced people. Such a perfect book. -- Louise Nettleton * Book Murmuration blog *
About the Author:
Glenda Millard is the author of The Stars at Oktober Bend, short-listed for the Carnegie Medal in 2017, as well as A Small Free Kiss in the Dark, re-published by Old Barn Books in 2017. Stephen Michael King has illustrated, written and designed many wonderful books for children and collaborated most recently with Glenda on The Duck and the Ducklings, selected by the International Youth Library as a White Raven picture book in 2015.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.