When the World Is Dreaming.
By Rita Gray. Pictures by Kenard Pak. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $17.99.
Faraway Fox. By Jolene
Thompson. Illustrated by Justin K. Thompson. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $17.99.
Hugh Lofting’s Dr. Dolittle
was renowned for being able to talk to the animals. Today’s children’s-book
authors prefer to spin tales based on the notion that they can communicate well
enough with animals to know what they are thinking – essentially to “think to
the animals.” In the case of Rita Gray’s When
the World Is Dreaming, this leads to a remarkably beautiful bedtime book
whose sweet Kenard Pak illustrations beautifully complement Gray’s sensitive,
thoughtful and imaginative text. The book opens with a quotation from Fukuda
Chiyo-Ni (1703-1775), a Japanese poet whose verse asks the butterfly what it
dreams of when folding its wings. This sets Gray off on a journey into the
thoughts and dreams of various animals watched by a wide-eyed little girl. In
the girl’s thoughts, each animal plays – and does other things – during
daytime, then finds shelter, sleeps and dreams. The snake rests “after the
wriggling, the sunning, the play”; the deer does so “after the walking, the
grazing, the play”; the newt does so “after the watching, the crawling, the
play”; and so forth. The little girl, Gray’s stand-in, gives each animal a
vivid imaginary dream life, and Pak’s illustrations are so lovely that children
may just sit and look at them again and again. The snake, for instance, dreams
of being the tail of a high-flying kite, the deer of being “tucked beneath a
mushroom cap” during a rainstorm, the newt of being transformed into a leaf to
stay hidden. For each animal, Gray produces a haunting refrain: “Sleep, Little
Newt,/ safe and warm./ Dream until the light of morn.” And “Sleep, Little
Rabbit,/ safe and warm,/ Dream until the light of morn” (in this case dreaming
of flying, using cabbage leaves as wings); and “Sleep, Little Mouse,/ safe and
warm./ Dream until the light of morn” (dreaming of using a boat made of tree
bark and a pea pod oar to row across a pond, away from a cat). At the book’s
end, the little girl herself is “in a cozy bed, all tucked in,” as all the
creatures she has thought about come to visit her sleep and give her “the best of all dreams.” This is so gentle,
so lovely a book, that it will cosset children sweetly into slumber night after
night and help them awake in the morning with warm and wonderful feelings about
nature and the things that animals might, just might, dream about.
The wife-and-husband team of
Jolene and Justin K. Thompson has produced a beautiful nature book as well: Faraway Fox. But this is a different
sort of book, one intended to make a point about human encroachment on animal
habitats and the ways in which humans can help make right some of the things
they have done wrong by spoiling the natural places. The argument itself is the
weakest part of the book, being very simplistic and overdone – every single
picture showing human habitation is ugly, and there are no people to leaven the
dismal scenes, not even children in a playground. The story follows the fox of
the title as he bemoans the loss of “the forest where I lived with my family”
and searches through the angular, uncaring, dismal landscape of homes and yards
and culverts that has replaced “the great shade trees” where he and the other
foxes used to rest “after playing all day.” Of course, foxes do not really play
all day – like other animals, they forage for food and try to avoid enemies –
and there is nothing idyllic about animals’ existence or uniformly ugly about
human settlements (many of which have foxes in them: this is an animal that is
quite adaptable). The Thompsons want to make a point, though, so they show
Faraway Fox, for example, huddling beneath a parked car during a rainstorm,
thinking about his big brother and how the two foxes “both loved the water and
we’d have contests to see who could swim the fastest and the farthest.” Faraway
Fox is terribly lonely when thinking of his absent family: a scene of him
crossing a deserted street amid fallen leaves and trash cans has real pathos
despite being tremendously overdramatized, as is one of him standing in a
deserted commercial parking lot. Finally, though, humans are seen in the book,
at a place where there is a sign designating a future wildlife preserve, which
the humans are building – and which includes a “new burrow” that runs beneath a
highway and that Faraway Fox walks through to find, wonder of wonders, woodland
on the other side, and his family waiting for him within it. “I am home!” he
exclaims at the end, and children will surely celebrate the happy ending and
rejoice with him – while adults will be interested in the author’s note
explaining about engineered solutions for displaced wildlife and showing
examples of accommodations that have been built in The Netherlands and Canada. Faraway Fox is so well-meaning and so
tender in its imagination about how a fox that becomes separated from its
family might feel that adults and children alike will be moved by the story and
perhaps even want to learn more about how it relates to the real world – using
the list of organizations at the book’s conclusion as a starting point. The
problem with the book is that it is so determinedly one-sided as to make humans
into caricatures and foxes into exemplars of perfection – an understandable
approach in a picture book, but one that can be effective without needing to go
as far overboard as the Thompsons do. Still, author and illustrator draw
attention to some significant issues here, and succeed in producing a
thought-provoking story that includes animals that are as beautiful to look at
as the human elements are ugly. Reconciling the tale with kids’ real-world
experiences and everyday lives will be a necessary task for parents who read
the book with their children.
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