A playful ode to things that come and go in life—and the one special bond that never fades
There are many things that go away: leaves fall, tears dry, music lasts only for a few moments, and bubbles pop, vanishing without a trace. Everything in life passes, moves on, or transforms—except one thing that never fades. With her signature warmth, playfulness, and beautiful illustrations, Beatrice Alemagna reminds us that in a changing world, the love between parent and child remains constant.---from the publisher
40 pages 978-1419744822 Ages 4-8
Keywords: change, cycles, love, parent/child, 4 year old, 5 year old, 6 year old, 7 year old, 8 year old
*************** “Though I know I’ll never lose affection
For people and things that went before
I know I’ll often stop and think about them”
-- Lennon & McCartney, “In My Life” (1965)
The Beatles were something that went away.
For Christmas ‘65, I got a record player and a copy of the Rubber Soul album. I was ten that year and, man, was I in heaven! The Beatles were my world. But then they stopped making music together and, later, John Lennon was killed. Those were some of my early lessons in the inevitability of change.
But THINGS THAT GO AWAY, a picture book by Beatrice Alemagn is not about big, heavy, newsworthy changes. It is more about personal moments in which special little things come and go. Moments of magic. Like a bird alighting on a finger before moving on. Or a passing night of sleep from which one awakens.
“Music flies away.
Soap bubbles, too.
One day lice (luckily)
will also leave.
Dark thoughts fade,
just like tears dry,
and the steam from a cup evaporates.
Bad weather goes away,
and so does fear.”
The text is a powerful, upbeat, and very clever meditation on things that come and then go away. The unusual book employs semi-opaque, see-through pages, which alternate with the regular pages. This permits depiction of change on each page of the story. For instance, a boy has a scraped knee. Then you turn the see-through page, and the scrape goes away.
The tale concludes on a sweet, positive note.
The illustrations are full of kids, critters, and fun folk who are either witness to a change or are personally changing. Young audiences will love getting their hands on the book and replaying how the changes take place as the see-through pages are moved back and forth. Even I got a kick out of it.
Fun and thought provoking, this book is a good reminder to pay attention and relish the moments that are sometimes all too easy to overlook.
Recommended by: Richie Partington, MLIS
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