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S**G
A Heartfelt, Beautiful Book
This is a lovely book -- lyrical words, beautiful pictures -- about family and tradition. Both poignant and heartwarming. Love it.
W**D
5 STARS!
Story and pictures are spot on!
L**Z
Wonderful art. The story is about a coal miner's ...
Wonderful art. The story is about a coal miner's son who looks forward to the same employment future. I didn't realize that when I ordered the book, so I added a postscript for my granddaughters, in which the little boy in question decides to pursue a career in green energy like solar and wind power, realizing that the age of coal that sustained his father and grandfather was ending-- and not a moment too soon!
M**4
Five Stars
LOVE THIS!
H**N
Thought provoking, wonderfully illustrated book
This is a moving book and just a bit sad. You really feel the father's love for his family and the sacrifices he makes to provide for them, poignant more than sad. We get to see the boy and his slow-paced summer day that takes him past the beach many times. Each time he thinks, "And deep down under that sea, my father is digging for coal." This thought is accompanied by a picture of his dad in the dark, small coal mine under the sea.Smith does a great job contrasting the life above ground with the life under ground. My favorite illustration though occurs near the end of the book. The day is nearly done and the family is sitting together around the dinner table looking relaxed and yet there is blackness under the table. We spent some time contemplating this picture and my daughter and I discussed it at length. The ultimate verdict is that although the family is relaxed and enjoying time together, under the surface, even at the table with them, lurks the spector of the coal and its pervasive, invasive presence.The end of the story is the sad part really. The boy is in bed and he shares his nighttime routine just as he shared his day. "At nighttime, it goes like this-" He goes on to think about the sea, and his father, and summer days, and the mine. Then he ends with, "One day, it will be my turn. I'm a miner's son. In my town, that's the way it goes." I thought it was so sad. My husband, ever the pragmatic one, commented that there was nothing wrong with being a miner. I explained that I was not sad that the boy might be a miner but that the boy didn't seem to have a choice. It is the lack of options, being burdened with a future he might not choose for himself, that made me feel sad.Overall, an enjoyable book that made our whole family remember to be grateful for what we have and taught us a bit about undersea mining as well!!
T**R
Historical Picture Book
In a coal town in Cape Breton, Canada, a boy wakes up to a summer day. He wakes to the sound of the sea, spends some time with his friends. Still, his mind continues to think of his father mining for coat deep under the sea in the darkness. He runs errands for his mother and visits his grandfather’s grave which looks out over the sea. His grandfather too was a coal miner and the boy knows that it is his future as well.Schwartz has created a book set in the 1950s in a coal town where families worked in the mines for generations. Even as the book shows a richness of a well-spent childhood, it is overshadowed by the presence of the coal mine in the boy’s life and how it impacted his family and his father in particular. She wisely works to contrast life above the ground with that below, showing a childhood of fresh breezes and sunlight that will turn into a life spent primarily in darkness.Smith’s illustrations clearly depict the claustrophobia of the mines, filling the page with smothering darkness and only a couple of men in a tunnel. This contrasts with his illustrations of days spent near the sea, sometimes the sun nearly blinding as it shines off the water. There is a sense of the inevitable in the book, of life paths already formed.A glimpse of Canadian history, this picture book will appeal to older readers. Appropriate for ages 6-9.
B**D
Did I ever tell you how lucky you are?
There’s been a lot of talk lately about how a parent can engender empathy in their children. It’s a good question and worth a lot of discussion and listening. As a parent I’ve wondered about it myself, but it's not the only question I've asked myself. How do you give a child a sense of self-worth without false ego inflation? Does responsibility linked with a direct reward system help or hurt the child in the long run? And most importantly (and this is a kicker) how do you help a child feel grateful for the life that they lead? Gratitude is a particularly difficult feeling to get a read on. You could spend all your livelong days telling a kid how grateful they should feel, but are you really going to get an emotional response out of them? Enter literature. Books. Learning. On Twitter today I saw an article in passing that suggested that we learn how to be human through books. If that’s the case then let me read “Town Is by the Sea” to my kids one more time. Exquisitely rendered, it’s a subtle day-in-the-life title that through the repetition of the text, and the pairing of light and dark images, manages to show, not tell, how hard the life of a coal miner’s kid can be.“From my house, I can see the sea.” A boy narrates a typical day in a Cape Breton mining town. While he scampers up the hills, plays with his friend, swings, walks to the store, and admires the sunlight on the water, his father toils away beneath the sea in a coal mine. The boy narrates for us how his days tend to play out and though we seem to see what looks like a collapse in the mine, nothing changes the boy’s spritely text. He’s no more excited than usual when his father comes home, but we know how close the man came to death. As the boy drifts off for the night we are assured that one day, down in those deep dark tunnels, “it will be my turn.” And the cycle of mining will begin anew.I love a picture book that knows how to be a picture book. Joanne Schwartz has been in this game for years and you can tell (and the fact that she’s a double threat as both author and children’s librarian probably doesn’t hurt matters either). The choice use of repetition and simple lines lend the text this oddly comforting quality, even as some of the images grow increasingly suspect. The fact that the book is narrated in the first person present tense is a careful choice. In the voice of the boy you discovered that in the face of uncertainty (whether or not his dad will come home alive at the end of the day) the boy has organized his life precisely. The location of his house to the road, cliff, sea, and town. A catalog of sounds heard when he wakes up. The form of the boy’s morning, lunch, and walk to the store. And these words are so constant and comforting to the reader that when you hit on that silent two-page spread, not knowing if the dad is alive or dead, it’s a gut punch. Artist Sydney Smith is also on board with the boy's systematic cataloging, turning the bright days of summer into six distinct squares on the penultimate pages, finalizing everything with the black of the sea at night.For such a dark concept it’s not a dark book. When my husband and I read this book to our six-year-old and three-year-old they seemed more intrigued by the fact that a kid could walk by himself to the store (this is the 50s’ after all) than the fact that someday that boy will work all day in the claustrophobic dark below the sea. Indeed I was intrigued to find that the chilling final lines of the picture book sink far deeper into the psyches of the adults reading this book than the kids. But I like that Joanne Schwartz does not judge the workers or the town. The inevitability of becoming a miner isn’t delivered by the young protagonist with anything more than simple honesty. Just listen to those final lines: “I’m a miner’s son. In my town, that’s the way it goes.” The dread I felt when he alluded to his future was purely personal, helped in no small part by Schwartz & Smith’s clever pairing of sunlight and gloom throughout the book. You might not want to work down there, but when your future is set in stone it’s hard to think outside the box. There’s a quote that Schwartz includes in her Author’s Note from Robert McIntosh’s “Boys in the Pits: Child Labour in the Coal Mines” that summarizes this perfectly. “The boy may have seen for years his father and older brothers leave for the pit. For most boys raised within these communities, the day arrived when they too surrendered their childhood to it.”Toronto artist Sydney Smith first came to the notice of a lot of American children’s librarians when he illustrated JonArno Lawson’s sublime “Sidewalk Flowers”. Smith captured the tone of the book so beautifully that had he any American residency at all that title would have been a true Caldecott Award contender. In “Town Is by the Sea” Smith stretches his proverbial limbs. Interestingly, he doesn’t dwell on the industrial grit and grime of the coal mines. The image of the industrial site is almost rudimentary and down in the mines themselves he’s far more interested in conveying the sheer oppressive weight of the rock and the sea by placing the workers in the lowest strata of the page. The bulk of the book is far more interested in light. How it fogs the horizon in the morning so that the line between sea and sky blurs to white. How a midday sun flecks the tips of the waves out at sea a pure white. Early afternoon sunlight through windowpanes and the sparkle of sun on sea and that sunset . . . that sunset. Though the Author’s Note at the end mentions that this book is set in the 1950s, you wouldn’t necessarily notice. There’s a timeless quality to these watercolors.To feel gratitude for one’s life, one needs to start out in a pretty privileged position from the start. If there’s nothing to feel grateful for then you’re probably not going to start because of a picture book. Still, a lot of kids in America that have regular access to picture books should feel a little gratitude for the fact that they don’t have to work in the coal mines when they turn 18. You get the feeling from the boy in “Town Is by the Sea” that he is perfectly aware of how lucky he is to see the sun shining on the sea all day every day. Schwartz and Smith have created a book that is both a good story and a beautiful object. A book that grants dignity to its characters and a seriousness to its subject matter without sacrificing a child’s need for play. This is, in short, a magnificent book. The kind that every reader will interpret in a different way. Only the best books can do that. Only the best books are capable.For ages 4-9.
N**D
Just beautiful
I absolutely loved Town is by the Sea - its pictures, its text, its message. It's quiet and understated, but it will stay with me forever I think. This town where, on the surface, not much seems to happen, but underneath which, for decades, men have been going out under the sea to carve out the coal, and a living for their families above the ground. And the boy in the story knows, even as he plays, this is his future too. My six year old son is fascinated by the contrasting pictures, above and below the sea, but my older daughters, 10 and 12, love it too for the story it tells and the world it presents - slow, quiet, dark, important. We don't normally find out about lives like this, but I'm so glad this story has been told, and so beautifully.
M**H
Calm and reflective
Beautiful illustrations - they convey the sense of calm you can get from gazing at the ocean. The writer contrasts this with the hard and dangerous work that is carried out under the ocean, yet approaches both with the child's sense of normal life.
L**H
This book is utterly beautiful, deeply moving - and a space to come ...
This book is utterly beautiful, deeply moving - and a space to come back to again and again to evoke strong images, thoughts, memories. So simple - and yet so very complex and valuable. Thank you xx
R**R
Gorgeous picture book for the older primary reader
This book is absolutely beautiful. The contrast between the simple but pleasurable light-filled life above and the darkness of the mines below is beautifully portrayed. It might be especially useful for a unit of work on jobs old and new.
J**N
Beautiful book
Beautifully illustrated book, a keeper.
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