Christmas Countdown: Day 2 - The Tree & Tree Beings
Tree Beings
Every single thing about this
exquisite publication is tactile bliss. Sliding ones hand over the luxuriant
cloth cover is akin to stroking the paperbark of a Maleuca. The subject matter
is not only detailed in informative and meaningful text but shown in sumptuous
detail, so authentic to the colour and texture of real trees, you’d swear
illustrator, Sandra Severgnini has merely included close up photographs. But
nothing is merely as it seems in Tree Beings. Every
square inch of this book is teeming with movement and a multitude of secret
tree-life waiting for keen young eyes to discover. Even the front cover hides at
least 70 images within the stately image of the book’s name sake. It is truly
beautiful. And purposeful too.
Raymond Huber has gathered an inspiring
clutch of tree wisdoms, scientific facts and real-life historical events
together that marvellously present the majesty of trees, their plights at the
hands of heedless humans and their absolute importance to our survival. The
achievements of scientists and activists, children and simple caring folk,
people who love trees, twine into four distinct chapters or rather Big Ideas (love
this!) that describe living with trees, how they can save us and why they are
like beings. The latter is truly astounding and one of the reasons I’ll never
be completely vegan: I just have way too much respect for our botanical beings.
This book is naturally text heavy
but Huber’s narrative is thoughtfully typeset into easy to read chunks with ‘imagine you are there…’ text boxes that create
a stunning sense of presence and drama. There is much to love about this book
which is ideal for young nature lovers but would be equally at home on the family
coffee table (do they still exist?).
The overriding significance of Tree Beings is just how
vital trees are for the health of our
planet’s climate, water, soil and wildlife. In short if we don’t recognise and
defend their importance, if we continue to ignore our part in nature as blindly
as we have theirs then we’ll continue to suffer fates such as climate change.
Like many notions of profound purport, Tree
Beings is beautifully simple and obvious and to paraphrase Dr Jane Goodall’s
foreword, I hope that it helps children all over the world understand the
importance (and beauty) of trees. It certainly makes me want to get out there
and plant one.
Highly recommended.
Title: Tree
Beings
Author: Raymond Huber
Illustrator: Sandra Severgnini
Publisher: EK Books,$34.99
Publication Date: October 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781925820539
For ages: 7 – 12
Type: Non Fiction Picture Book
Buy the
Book: EK Books, Boomerang
Books
The Tree
Graeme Base’s artwork is renowned. His picture books are incomparable examples of intelligent storytelling and exquisite visual treasure hunts that fascinate as well as entertain. The Tree is this and more.
Cow (a gorgeous highland cow) and Duck (a stunning male mandarin duck) happen upon a gigantic tree one day. Its branches are laden with mooberries – cow’s favourite and its base roots are festoon with mushquacks – duck’s delight. They each take up residency in the tree, cow amidst the branches, duck deep below in a secret hideout; each blissfully unaware of the other tucked away in their own little kingdom until one day a giant storm rocks their reality and sense of security. Jealous of the other’s domain, paranoia sets in so that each of them sabotages the structural safety of their tree. The inevitable happens when another fierce storm strikes and their home, the tree is lost. Will they be able to rebuild and learn to live in harmony?
The Tree is a visual feast that belies the simplicity of the text. Cow and Duck’s tree not only housed them but was home to a myriad of animals juxtaposed to represent all continents of the world. Their story suggests the need to look beyond our own closeted existences at those around us and examine our communities and our reliance on one another in times of adversity. The Tree, like mother earth, is a mighty and generous provider but it cannot withstand fear and ignorance indefinitely. With patience, understanding and time, nature repairs and like the tree of life, strength and beauty restored.
The Tree is a story steeped with mood, comedy and a deep appreciation for the natural environment both joyful to read aloud or absorb quietly by oneself.
Title: The
Tree
Author/ Illustrator: Graeme Base
Publisher: Penguin Random House,$24.99
Publication Date: November 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781760897048
For ages: 4+
Type: Picture Book
Buy the
Book: Boomerang
Books, QBD
Books, Booktopia
Comments
I want to live in a library so I can read every book ever written.