The serpent's tale by Gary Crew and Matt Ottley
Lothian, 2010. ISBN 9780734410283.
Picture book. Playing on the word 'tale' by both author and illustrator
gives the
reader a tantalising narrative about the universality of story in this
picture book for all ages. The boy pesters his mother into buying him
an amulet at the market. The metal charm is of a snake grabbing its own
tail, and the boy when asleep dreams the dreams of the ages. From the
first men, fighting for survival, to times of war, discovery and loss,
the tale of man is the same, beginning anew with each generation. When
the boy wakes the next morning, his mother opens the curtain onto a
world at war, and implores him to pack and run, to see what the story
will be in the future.
The tale of men is the same tale, and the snake and its tail appear on
most pages, emphasizing the place a story in our lives. Ottley's
illustrations parallel and augment the story, taking the story onto
another level altogether, with his scenes of war and destruction,
juxtaposed with scenes of a mother's love, courage, and a possible
future. The snake can be picked out even on the endpapers, and will
cause delight with younger readers. Each illustration has a hidden
depth and will entice readers to look past what they first see, to
discover parallels and hints of differing episodes in man's story.
Overlaid with the whiff of myth and legend, the book will initiate much
discussion in classes across the board, as the students delve into the
nature of story, its place in our world and its universality.
Fran Knight