Boat of Dreams

28 March 2017

Description

How does a boy come to live alone in an apparently deserted city? Are they separated by distance or by time? Does the man dream the boy? Does the boy dream the man? Is a blank paper in a floating bottle an invitation to imagine our futures? Is the man’s flying boat an encouragement to the boy to dream? Are the man and the boy the same person—the boy dwelling in the man’s memory? Is a message in a bottle the earthbound dreams of the elderly? Is a flying boat the unconstrained dreams of the young? This wordless, many-layered 80-page picture book invites all these interpretations and more. The intricately detailed illustrations reveal new wonders with each viewing. Neither children nor adults will ever tire of this wonderful testament to imagination, memory, and dreams.

Reviews

"This wordless, 80-page picture book opens with an elderly man waking up. He goes outside and we discover he lives at the seaside. After a floating bottle beaches, he opens it to find a piece of paper. He begins to draw: a picture of a boat. He places the paper back in the bottle and returns it to the sea. The action then shifts to a city, where a small boy finds an envelope at his doorstep. Inside is the drawing. And we watch as the boy draws a crude picture of himself inside the boat. The next thing we know, he is aboard it, flying to the old man. When he arrives, they embrace; the boy hands the man the envelope, and flies off. Inside the envelope is the picture the boy has drawn. Fin. This strange story is drawn in gorgeous, full bleed, sepia-toned, sharp-angled Expressionist style, like storyboards for a Tim Burton film. But what does it mean? Some readers may postulate that the boy and man are the same person, separated only by age. After all, there are many parallels between the characters. Others may interpret it is simply an evocative dream. Whatever it is, it’s a wonderful invitation to imagine. What could be better than that?" — Michael Cart, Booklist Starred Review

"

Stunning stylized sepia artwork on full pages and in panels illustrates this wordless story.  Verdict: Intriguing images and interpretations abound, offering readers lots to pore over and ponder. A lovely choice.

" — Daryl Grabarek, School Library Journal *Starred Review*

"A nuanced physical and emotional landscape aimed to capture experienced readers but likely to snag the occasional neophyte as well." — Kirkus

"

It’s a haunting story of inexplicable connections, and Coelho resists spelling out its mysteries, letting readers draw their own conclusions.

" — Publishers Weekly

"Rogério Coelho has the gift to transform images into messages, far into near, and near into inside. In his images the colors travel through sepia and blue combinations, the spaces house countless objects, the objects with their magical traits come alive, and the characters reveal themselves as affections. In a trip of discovery, childhood meets old age, and old age meets hope. Colors, shapes, and volumes are unwritten words that the reader’s intelligence reconstructs as the poetry of the near and far, the journey of a boat of dreams in order to tie the two ends of life." — Marta Marais de Costa

"

There is an old man who lives on the beach. One day he sees a bottle with a paper in it. But the paper is blank.  So he draws a really cool, steampunk-like boat.  Then he puts it back in the bottle and sends it back into the ocean.  Then the boy gets a letter, and it is the man's drawing.  The boy draws a picture of him and his cat on the boat, then he tapes the picture over his bed and goes to sleep. When he is sleeping, he has a dream that he is going to see the man, and he is sailing to see him in the boat.

The book doesn't have any words, so you have to make up the story yourself. The pictures are really beautiful and I really like them even thought they aren't very colorful. They make you think it is like a dream. You don't really know if the old man is the boy's grandfather, but they are happy to see each other.  There are a lot of details in the pictures, like the old man's house is full of drawings and maybe inventions and lots of old things.

5/5 STARS" — Liesel, Age 4, Kids' Book Buzz

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9780884485346

£17.99

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