Review: Boats for Papa by Jessixa Bagley

Boats for Papa by Jessixa Bagley

Boats for Papa by Jessixa Bagley (InfoSoup)

Buckley and his mother live together in a little cabin near the ocean. Buckley loves to explore the beach near their house, collecting driftwood to build little boats. One day he sends a favorite boat out to his father, whom he thinks about often. He decides that if the boat never returns that it means his father received it. The boat doesn’t come back. From then on, on special days, he and his mother send a boat off to his father. Buckley’s boats get better and better. Then on his birthday, Buckley forgets to put the note on his boat that says that it’s for his father and how much he loves him. Buckley heads inside to find paper for the note and discovers that his mother has been collecting all of the boats Buckley has sent to his father. So when Buckley sends his birthday boat out onto the ocean, he’s made one big change.

Bagley’s book grapples with some huge issues like grief and loss but it does so in a way that allows children to approach the situation at their own level. It never forces emotions onto the reader, instead making those emotions much more intense by having characters who internalize much of their grief. The use of boats to send a message is beautiful and moving in itself. The fact that the mother is collecting them, yet allowing her son his own grieving process is also very special.

The artwork in the book is done with pen and watercolor. It offers so much detail, creating a setting that is rich and warm. It suits the story so well, giving the reader a chance to realize on their own that the mother is also sad and grieving in her own way even while supporting her young son and protecting him. The natural setting is awash in watercolors, giving it flow and a luminous quality that lets light shine from the sky and ocean too.

Grief and loss are made beautiful and tangible in this picture book that offers such grace and nurturing. Appropriate for ages 3-5.

Reviewed from copy received from Roaring Brook Press.

This Week’s Tweets, Pins & Tumbls

Here are the links I shared on my Twitter, Pinterest, and Tumblr accounts this week that I think are cool:

From a 1999 Time article entitled “The Wizard of Hogwarts.”

CHILDREN’S BOOKS

10 Picture Book Biographies About Famous Artists | Brightly http://buff.ly/1MfZEhB #kidlit

Q & A with Abby Hanlon http://buff.ly/1MgMy3E #kidlit

Roald Dahl’s gruesome twosome The Twits return in new children’s app http://buff.ly/1HVuk2j #kidlit

Spring 2016 Children’s Sneak Previews http://buff.ly/1Dz8sHX #kidlit

These Washington, D.C., Vending Machines Are Providing Free Books to Kids http://buff.ly/1MwsSGK #kidlit

What Publishers Read at Home with Kids http://buff.ly/1KcU2SY #kidlit

Book Art Is Awesome: Around The Home

LIBRARIES

All Those techies Who Predicted the Demise of the Public Library Were Wrong http://buff.ly/1DqAENi #libraries

How the NY Public Library Crowdsources Digital Innovation http://buff.ly/1gQJUFL #libraries

Original Carnegie Library sign given to Chippewa Falls Public Library http://buff.ly/1MKPL9D #libraries

YA Books for Video Gamers - definitely true that many of these appeal to my high school "gamers."

TEEN READS

127 YA Books Releasing Between July and September 2015 http://buff.ly/1KgL5Im #yalit

Falling out of love with YA http://buff.ly/1JhzOsy #yalit

James Dawson: ‘Young Adult literature should celebrate being gay’ – Telegraph http://buff.ly/1Kn5fTF #yalit #lgbt

John Green Is This Close to Having All His Books Made Into Movies http://buff.ly/1KmV4Ma #yalit

Laura Jarratt’s top 10 YA thrillers with sisters http://buff.ly/1HMaRmD #yalit

Book Junkies