Written by Andrew Larsen
Illustrated by Carey Sookocheff
Owlkids Books
978-1-77147-378-1
32 pp.
Ages 3-7
September 2020
Like many children, this child has very definite preferences, especially about the types of stories he likes. Actually he is more adamant about the types of stories he doesn't like than those he likes. But does he really know what he doesn't like?
From I Do Not Like Stories by Andrew Larsen, illus. by Carey Sookocheff |
From I Do Not Like Stories by Andrew Larsen, illus. by Carey Sookocheff |
From I Do Not Like Stories by Andrew Larsen, illus. by Carey Sookocheff |
Without establishing the fact that the child has been wrong all along and that he, in fact, does like stories, Andrew Larsen delivers that message with a tongue-in-cheek approach. It's like a parent who smiles, knowing that the child who insists that they don't like something will like it once they try it. It's accepting a child's assertions as true but allowing for leeway in the actuality of those pronouncements. By allowing the child to come to that realization himself, Andrew Larsen takes the adult out of the equation and makes it all about the growth of the child in learning what he might like for himself.
As in her earlier books (see What Happens Next, Wet and Buddy and Earl for other samples), Carey Sookocheff's illustrations play on the author's important message and elevates it with subtlety of colour and line for greater impact. Her artwork plays on that juxtaposition of child and cat, what one affirms and the other experiences. Same circumstances but different perspectives and appreciation for those circumstances. Carey Sookocheff's minimalist palette, primarily pale blue-greys with splashes of yellow and orange, keeps the reader focused on the darkest elements of her illustrations: the cat and the child's head. So, while it is the child's head only that has decided what he doesn't like, it's the whole cat that lives life, pursuing adventures and involving itself in its day fully.
For any child who cannot see beyond a pervasive opinion that may or may not be valid, I Do Not Like Stories will make them think twice and perhaps even consider a different perspective to the story.
From I Do Not Like Stories by Andrew Larsen, illus. by Carey Sookocheff |
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