The
art of communication
Stephanie Owen Reeder
Like
all books, picture books are a vehicle of communication, narrative,
information and emotions. Because of the adaptability of the picture-book
genre, which communicates using both verbal and visual language
systems, it is sometimes possible for authors and illustrators
to challenge the underlying precepts of the role of language in
the communication process.
This is especially the case in picture books for older readers.
Woolvs in the Sitee, by Margaret
Wild and Anne Spudvilas (Viking, $26.95 hb, 32 pp, 067004167X),
definitely presents such a challenge. Innovative, intriguing and
potentially controversial, this book contains everything that
a good picture book should possess except correct spelling.
But that is part of its appeal and a large part of the reason
why Wilds text communicates so effectively. Like Mark Haddon
in The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time (2003),
Wild has created a convincing voice, getting inside the head of
her teenage protagonist, Ben, in such a way that she uncompromisingly
communicates his innermost thoughts and feelings. She does this
using the phonetic spelling, awkward grammatical constructs and
made-up words of an undereducated, or perhaps dyslexic, teenager.
However, like the ever-evolving language of SMS and e-mails, Ben
has no trouble communicating.
Even
with its creative spelling, Wilds text rolls off the tongue
at times lyrical, with rich cadences and unusual word pairings,
and at others prosaic. However, it is always true to the character
of the terrified but determined boy in his nightmare sitee,
where he is beset by woolvs as he searches for his
missing neighbour, and himself. The book poses the question: are
the woolvs real or imaginary, allegorical or analogous? Whatever
they are, the sense of menace and fear is palpable, identification
with the lonely boy inescapable, and Wilds ability to write
uncompromising, demanding and ultimately heart-wrenching text
undeniable.
However, the appeal of Woolvs in the Sitee is not confined
to Wilds text. In a reprise of their award-winning collaboration
Jenny Angel (1999), Wild has again joined forces with Spudvilas,
and the result is electric. Just as Wild challenges the way that
we perceive the role of words in the communication process, Spudvilas
similarly plays with accepted modes of visual communication, mixing
traditional and non-traditional devices. She moves from the representational
to the abstract, using darkly shadowed, evocative images with
expressionist overtones. Jarring diagonals, symbolic images and
variations in tonal quality add atmosphere and gradations of meaning
to Wilds text. When the words are powerful, Spudvilas provides
images of colours and shapes without obvious connotations, thus
resting the readers eye while the mind concentrates on the
ideas or emotions that the text communicates. However, as with
the majority of Spudvilass work, some of her most commanding
images are portraits, especially those of Ben, which, like Wilds
text, invite the reader to gaze deep into his soul, and their
own. This is verbal-visual communication at its best.
While
picture books for older readers often manipulate the communication
process, books for younger readers tend to use more traditional
language to communicate. However, they can still challenge the
imagination, while exploring more comfortable themes. The
Wrong Thing, by Isobelle Carmody
and Declan Lee (Viking, $26.95 hb, 32 pp, 0670888265),
explores the importance of belonging. When something obviously
in the wrong place enters his home, Hurricane the cat hunts it
down. While Carmodys simple but poignant text carries the
storyline, Lees illustrations explode across the double-page
spreads into a nightmare world where everything is wrong: pictures
break out of frames, toys come to life, fish sprout wings, and
symbolic and surrealistic images collide and feed off one another.
This is an out-of-this-world visual trip with an ultimately reassuring
message.
Picture books can also provide new insights into familiar stories.
Dimity Dumpty: The Story of Humptys
Little Sister (Walker Books, $27.95 hb, 40 pp, 1844280675)
presents a well-loved nursery rhyme with a double pike with twist!
If you have ever wondered how Humpty Dumpty got to be on that
wall, or whether he was a good or a bad egg, wonder no more, because
the inimitable Bob Graham has come
to the rescue. This is the unexpurgated version graffiti
and all! But the story really belongs to Dumptys sister,
Dimity, who, unlike her extrovert brother, is quiet, solitary
and withdrawn. However, like all of Grahams characters,
she has a heart of gold and, when pushed, can rise to the occasion.
This is vintage Graham compassionate, warm and engaging,
with old-fashioned English-style illustrations in keeping with
the traditional nursery rhyme theme. And, as with all of Grahams
books, at its heart are family and community albeit the
family lives in an egg carton, and the community is a travelling
circus. The text is longer than Graham usually writes, but it
is eminently readable and fairy tale-like in construction. This
is an endearing story, with a shy and retiring heroine, and a
charming ambience.
Nigel Gray and Andrew McLean have
also taken a well-known tale and reworked it for the picture-book
genre. Pip and the Convict
(Cygnet, $26.95 hb, 32 pp, 1920694234) is an adaptation of an
extract from Charles Dickenss Great Expectations
(1861). In communicating the essence of Dickenss story while
still capturing his dialogue and turn of phrase including
the familiar brought up by hand Gray has produced
an illustrated story rather than a picture story book. He captures
the essence of Dickenss prose without making the text inaccessible
to a picture book audience, although, as with any condensed version,
there are some disjunctions. McLeans familiar loose drawing
style, with flowing pencil outlines worked and reworked and allowed
to show through the watercolour washes, has a compelling immediacy
that serves the story well. His predominately grey palette captures
the bleakness of the landscape and of the characters lives,
as well as enhancing the sense of menace and fear. This is a competent
retelling of a familiar tale, and one which should whet the appetite
for further Dickensian experiences.
The Boy Who Built a Boat,
by Ross Mueller and Craig Smith (Allen
& Unwin, $24.95 hb, 32 pp, 1741143934), also communicates
traditionally, using a fun cumulative text. Smiths busy
and colourful illustrations are full of action and visual interest.
He conveys the young boy Henrys determination, enthusiasm
and ability to immerse himself in what he is doing as, in a lush
coastal landscape, he collects all the things he needs to build
a boat inclu-ding his sister. It is refreshing to find
a book that champions the satisfaction children derive not just
from playing outdoors but also from making something for themselves.
The theme of overcoming or dealing with the childhood fear of
noises in the night is a favourite of authors and illustrators,
and has almost created a tradition of its own. Noises
at Night, by Beth Raisner Glass
and Susan Lubner, and illustrated by Bruce Whatley (Omnibus,
$24.95 hb, 32 pp, 1862916829), deals competently and engagingly
with this theme. Glass and Lubner have written a solid rhyming
text, with good read-aloud rhythms. It explores the wonder of
the imagination, as a young boy puts a positive and adventurous
spin on the noises around him as he tries to get to sleep. Whatley
successfully bring the boys adventures to life in colour-saturated
illustrations with strong design elements that engage the eye.
This is warm and comforting bedtime reading.
Picture
books for younger readers often use humour to communicate with
readers and to engage them in the narrative. In Grandads
Phase: My Family Project (Lothian, $27.95 hb, 32 pp,
0734408552), Archimede Fusillo and Terry Denton set out to entertain
both children and adults alike with a quirky, cheeky text and
sometimes over-the-top illustrations full of visual jokes. Terry
Dentons slightly lunatic cartooning is at its best as he
illustrates Fusillos school project on his far-from-ordinary
family. The harried and conservative dad is a wonderful foil to
the rebellious grandfather who, as the title implies, is going
through a phase something usually ascribed to children.
He has decided that he does not want to be an old fuddy-duddy
anymore with hilarious results. Grandads Phase
challenges the stereotypes of old age, but it is also an irreverent
romp through family life, with child appeal aplenty.
However, picture books can also explore more philosophical subjects.
The Smallest Bilby and the Midnight Star,
by Nette Hilton and Bruce Whatley
(Working Title Press, $19.95 hb, 32 pp, 187628871X), is about
the smallest bilby in the bilby patch, but it is also about love,
determination and the power of kisses. Well-established picture-book
author Hilton has a fine way with words, and her story of the
bilby who wants to kiss a star is highly readable and engaging,
while Whatleys illustrations have a beguiling clarity and
luminosity that suit this sensitive exploration of the power of
love.
Visual
language alone can often communicate the intensity of childhood
emotions such as love. The award-winning Korean picture book Waiting
for Mummy, by Tae-Jun Lee and
Dong-Sung Kim (Wilkins Farago, $26.95 hb, 40 pp, 0958557144),
has been translated into English for the first time in this Australian
edition. However, the text is minimalist, and it is the illustrations
that carry the narrative in this touching tale of childhood persistence
and faith. Ink paintings and sketches bring the Korean setting
to life, evoking another place and culture, while exploring the
universal principle that the most important thing in any childs
life is the mother. The illustrations convey the childs
isolation in a world of adults, and highlight his incredible single-mindedness.
No matter how long it takes, how inhospitable the weather or how
indifferent the adults he meets, he is going to wait at the tram
stop until his mother comes. Not surprisingly, the most moving
and evocative pages, and the ones that communicate most affectingly
are those without any words at all.
The picture book can also provide a very effective format for
non-fiction material, using verbal and visual narratives to impart
knowledge, pique curiosity and engender wonder. Mustara,
by Rosanne Hawke and the incomparable
illustrator Robert Ingpen (Lothian,
$27.95 hb, 24 pp, 0734408994), brings to life the world of the
camels and Afghani cameleers who played such an important role
in the exploration of Australia. Mustara is a young and rather
small camel that belongs to the Afghan boy Taj. Taj has strong
and affectionate relationships with both his camel and his friend,
the somewhat rebellious Emmeline. They all feel constricted by
the lives they lead and by the fact that they cannot go into the
desert with the explorers. A dust storm helps to change that.
Hawkes poetic and well-researched writing effectively combines
with Ingpens sublime illustrations to capture the grittiness,
the heat and the grandeur of the desert and the characters who
inhabit it.
Jane and Christine Christophersen
evoke another iconic part of Australia and the life of the Aboriginal
people who inhabit it. My Home in Kakadu
(Magabala, $14.95 pb, 28 pp, 1875641939) has naïve
illustrations that present the family life of the girl Tarrah
in a series of snapshots. Like photographs in a family album,
they effectively capture the vibrant colours of Kakadu and the
strong ties between the land, the people and family members. The
story is underpinned by facts about the bush tucker that can be
found during what Aborigines identify as the Northern Territorys
six distinct seasons. This picture book abounds with information
about traditional and modern-day Aboriginal life, presented in
an appealing package.
As well as communicating information about how people live, picture
books can effectively communicate more com-plex concepts such
as evolution. In When Elephants Lived
in the Sea (Lothian, $27.95 hb, 32 pp, 0734408420),
Jane Godwin and Vincent Agostino
present a whimsical interpretation of the elephants evolution
from a sea to a land animal. The book design is impressive. There
is physical interplay between the words and images (for example,
words tumble across the page with the water squirted from the
elephants trunk), and the mellifluous cadences of the language
used to describe the elephants and their surroundings are well
matched by the strong colours and tactile representations of the
elephants hides. This compelling book uses well-known facts
about elephants, such as their wrinkly skin and their purported
long memories, to present the wonders of evolution in an understandable,
but by no means simplistic, manner.
As shown in Woolvs in the Sitee,
a secure living environment is an essential part of existence.
Like Margaret Wild, Narelle Oliver
effectively captures the voice of another being in her latest
picture book, Home (Scholastic,
$27.95 hb, 32 pp, 1862916683), while at the same time questioning
the nature of perception. Based on the true story of a pair of
peregrine falcons that are refugees from a bushfire, Oliver recounts
their search for a home and their attempt to survive in what appears
to be an alien and inhospitable environment. She cleverly counterpoints
words and images: the spare text is written from the birds
perspective, while the illustrations show the human reality. The
illustrations visually arresting montages of collage, linocut,
photography, painting and drawing create strong images
that successfully contrast the natural with the built environment.
The text and illustrations loop and wheel around each other, just
as the falcons loop and wheel around their new home. Like many
of the books examined here, Home illustrates just how versatile
a vehicle of communication the picture book can be.
Stephanie
Owen Reeder is a Canberra-based author, editor and reviewer.
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