I remember reaching very very quickly to open the cover of The
Flower at the recent CBCA
Children's Book Conference
in Sydney. I had not seen it before and was rapidly entranced by the
magnificent and very sophisticated illustrations by the talented Lisa
Evans, who weaves such an emotive and melancholic visual through this
book - it's just utterly beautiful.
It's not just the illustrations, however, that do The Flower proud. The storyline, by experienced author John Light, is so searingly simple and clearly written, it's almost perfect (remember there's actually 'no such thing as perfect', as my neice says).
Young Brigg lives in a dank, monochromatic room in a dank, monochromatic city, with little colour and little to dream for. He walks to work through the dank, monochromatic streets to the library, where he works amongst the dank, monochromatic books.
But then one day, he finds some colour. In a mysterious section marked DO NOT READ, Brigg cannot help himself. He plucks a book from the shelf and this clandestine find features none other than the heart stopping magnificence of... a flower.
A flower? He's never seen such a vibrantly beautiful object before. What are these flowers? Where can they be found? Brigg hunts the city for this amazing beauty and finds nothing... but then, in the window of an old junk shop, he sees a dusty wrapper - with a flower on the outside, and inside are some strange little wrinkled brown things called 'seeds'.
Brigg follows the instructions on the 'seed' packet but with no 'earth' around, he instead scrapes together some dust, searches the city for enough water to fill a mug, and plants the seeds.
You can imagine his disappointment when nothing happens.
Of course, a while later, Brigg wakes to find the oddest green shoot curling out of his mug - Brigg is overjoyed. He loves his new object, but when it's sucked away by the automatic cleaning system while he's at work, joy turns to despair - what will be the fate of his leafy green shoot?
Let's just say, its fate is to colour Brigg's world - and so concludes this goose-bumping story on a world that our children's children may just know one day... a world without green, without fresh, without beauty.
A story of hope, beauty and the power of nature, this amazing book is one of my current favourites, and should be in every library and home of this sometimes dank, monochromatic world.
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(Page amended 3 August 2017)
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contents of this site are copyright © John Light.