Falling angels by Colin Thompson
Random House, Australia 2010. ISBN 978 1741664201.
Picture book. The circle of life from birth to death is shown in this
rich and varied offering from Colin Thompson. As Grandmother nears the
end of her life, the child draws closer to her, bringing her gifts form
her excursions, flying to the rainforest to get an orchid, or the seas
of Patagonia to collect a seashell, or to the Arctic north to bring
back snow. Sally has always been able to fly, and is dismayed when her
mother rejects the stories as 'silly' and tells her its time she came
down to earth. But she realises that Grandmother too can fly, and so
the pair take flight during her last days.
Hints of otherworldliness, of people on earth who are angels, abound in
this quite surreal story. The book on the floor in the opening double
page is entitled, Future Eden, as is the logo on the t-shirt of the boy
at the end. Are they angels going back, or finding a new Eden, or
falling to earth. Is a falling angel one who has lost the gift of
wonderment or imagination? These questions loaded my mind as I read and
reread this enticing book. The illustrations have the feel of a shadow
box displaying a myriad of wondrous things collected form across the
world. The pages of doors lure the reader's eyes to search for hidden
things, and the readers are instantly rewarded.
Questioning, puzzling and sometimes satisfying, Thompson's picture
books stand out, offering readers a different sphere of reality for the
intrepid adventurer.
Fran Knight