Waiting for Chicken Smith by David Mackintosh (Little Hare
Books) HB RRP $24.99 ISBN9781760501761
Reviewed by
Dianne Bates
This story
is set on a beach where a child stays in the same cabin every year with his
family. Every year, the child’s friend Chicken Smith stays on the beach, too,
with his dad and his dog, Jelly. But this year Chicken hasn’t arrived, and this
is a worry because there’s lots of usual things to do with him – ride bikes,
share milkshakes, walk to the lighthouse with sandwiches and hunt for whales
through Chicken’s binoculars.
There’s so
much that the narrator and Chicken have shared in the past. But now Chicken’s
cabin looks different – the windows are shut; the grass is long, and Chicken’s
bike is missing. The boy’s sister urges him to go to the cliff-top with her
while he’s waiting, and there, for the first time, the boy sees a whale.
Without his holiday friend, the boy and his sister, Mary Ann (named on the last
page) get to spend time together, possibly for the first time while on
holidays.
The
illustrations in this book by Australian author and illustrator, David
Mackintosh, are dramatic and wonderful, from pencil drawings to silhouetted
shapes (such as a bicycle frame and a lighthouse on a cliff with a red wash and
golden moon). Every page rewards the reader with astonishing pictures that
immerse one and make one want to be creative, too.
This is a
stunning book which evokes so much of the temporary and often intense
friendships children make in their lives. It is not usual to have a story about
the end of such a holiday friendship, but the author/illustrator celebrates it
and shows the reader that sometimes, though friendships end, there are always
happy memories. And new experiences to be had. This book is highly recommended
for readers 5 to 8 years.
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