Written by Joanne Schwartz
Illustrated by Nahid Kazemi
Groundwood Books
978-1-77306-211-2
36 pp.
Ages 5-9
September 2020
As fall will soon blend into winter, The Old Woman seems a perfect read. Just as a calendar year trudges onto its end, an elderly woman and her equally-aged dog plod on in their lives, albeit in good company, never hurrying, getting where they will when they do.
From The Old Woman by Joanne Schwartz, illus. by Nahid Kazemi |
When the old woman and the dog head out into the hills for a walk because she "wanted to hear the crunch of dry leaves under her feet and the wind whispering through the trees," she remembers the trees, boulder and rocks and "when she used to play outside for hours, never wanting to go in." They walk, they play–well, she tosses sticks and the dog chases them– and they rest and they appreciate what is.
From The Old Woman by Joanne Schwartz, illus. by Nahid Kazemi |
It's hard to identify the mood of Joanne Schwartz and Nahid Kazemi's picture book The Old Woman.
Both the text and the art whisper of a melancholic story of an elderly
woman and her vigilant canine companion. But it's not. This is a story of
serenity and memory and togetherness. It has the heart that comes from many years of living, alone and together, of caring for others and contemplating the vastness of the world while appreciating the small domain created through companionship.
The Old Woman is not a story of loneliness, though some may see it that
way, especially through the lens of a COVID19-inflicted society. But it is not. The woman may be appear to be lonesome but the story is more about living each day as possible with an occasional look back to what was. It's this wistfulness that touched me. Between Joanne Schwartz's words evoking such emotional tranquility and Nahid Kazemi's ethereal illustrations of filmy chalk pastels and coloured pencils that give The Old Woman such solemnity, I cried each time I read The Old Woman.
I hope that when we all pass from fall to winter that we all have the companionship of a loyal friend and the will to appreciate what we had and have, even if more slowly.
From The Old Woman by Joanne Schwartz, illus. by Nahid Kazemi |
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