News from Down Under
Turning Heads
BY KAREN JAMEYSON
icture
books for older readers. The topic is a hot one in Australia, particularly
in regard to the Book of the Year Awards. Should this art form be
judged shoulder to shoulder with the more traditional picture book
for a very young child? Who reads these books, anyway? As the controversy
whirls on, however, the books in question continue to be published
in greater numbers, with a range of results.
Mixed public reactions frequently accompany award
decisions. But when a picture book for older readers was named the
1995 Picture Book of the Year by the Australian Children’s
Book Council, there was, according to one critic, downright “hostility.”
That book, however, The Watertower, written by Gary Crew
and illustrated by Steven Woolman, continues to attract interest
— and readers. Crew, a prestidigitator of words, has managed
to work his magic successfully on a variety of reading levels, with
a number of his books receiving widespread critical acclaim (his
novel Strange Objects, for instance, was the Australian
Children’s Book of the Year in 1991 as well as an Edgar Allan
Poe Award for Mystery Fiction nominee in the U.S.). The Watertower
turned heads from the moment it was published — literally
as well as figuratively. That’s because, to begin with, the
reader must actually turn the book on its side to read it and then
continue to turn it as the story progresses (or doesn’t, depending
on your interpretation). According to one advocate, a high school
English teacher, this actual turning/handling — along with
the tantalizing clues to the story — is what hooks her student
readers, particularly the less enthusiastic ones.
Both Crew and Woolman like to make their readers
work. They understand precisely how much explanation their audience
needs, and The Watertower strains readers’ abilities
nearly to the breaking point. So this story of the boys Spike and
Bubba going for a secret swim in the rusty old watertower in their
outback town has another strand of plot looped around it, one that
is related somehow to the watertower, what goes on there, and the
fascination it holds for the townspeople. But author and artist
provide no definitive information — only enigmatic visual and
textual clues. Although the illustrations do depict the startling
blue of the outback sky and the characteristic dusty red of the
soil, the general darkness of the pages—black is the predominant
color — underlines a malevolence seemingly at work, somewhere,
somehow. And an incomplete circle placed at the top of the watertower
appears repeatedly in the illustrations: in eyes, on hats, on glasses,
in windows, in the shape of the paintings, in the design of the
book overall. Just one piece missing, the creators seem to be taunting
over and over. Just one more bit of information and you’d
understand. But, as it is, unanswered questions hover in the air,
leaving readers to argue, debate, muse, and ultimately reach their
own verdicts about what happens. And now that Crocodile Press is
publishing an edition in the northern hemisphere, American readers
can make up their own minds. (Although the cover — which portrays
the watertower at the center of pulsating waves, lit up with an
eerie green light that highlights its flying saucer-like shape — gives
readers a pretty good hint. Think Tripods.)
Among other recent picture book titles more appropriate
for, if not aimed specifically at, older readers than the traditional
audience is Tohby Riddle’s Great Escape from City Zoo.
The book nudges its way through age barriers as nimbly as its escape-artist
characters scale the walls of the zoo. The basic story of the “extraordinary
events” surrounding the getaway of an anteater, an elephant,
a turtle, and a flamingo from the City Zoo can be followed by a
young reader without difficulty. After their escape, the foursome
get themselves some disguises — the turtle cuts a fetching figure
in his sailor suit — and begin to make their way in what is
essentially a larger zoo: the world of human beings. In the meantime,
the real zookeepers stay “hot on their trail.” Any slip-up
means it’s back behind bars (where, incidentally, any recaptured
animal is greeted as a celebrity by the other inmates).
This fundamental story inspires smiles of satisfaction
in its own right. But other forces are at work. It’s not just
the understated, wry humor that the more mature reader will respond
to, although that offers plenty of appeal (the anteater fainting
outside a taxidermist’s window with its “You snuff ‘em — We
stuff ‘em” sign; the elephant succumbing to the lure
of a public fountain). The book’s most obvious visual distinction
is its black-and-white artwork: a “silver screen treatment,”
says the author-artist, in keeping with his desire to give the title
the appearance of a 1930s adventure film. Armed with a bottle of
India ink and three brushes, he went to work, watering down the
ink to achieve the subtlety of different shades. From those shades
and from his restrained lines ingeniously emerge a bounty of visual
references to twentieth-century popular culture. In one illustration,
for instance, the four escapees stride across a road in a formation
instantly recognizable to fans of the Beatles and the Abbey
Road album in particular. Another portrait is strongly reminiscent
of a moment from the 1930s film version of The Grapes of Wrath.
With an Annolike sense of the world and its picturesque components,
Riddle has tucked in many other sights as well, including King Kong,
the Loch Ness monster, and Edward Hopper’s Nighthawks,
along with what are perhaps less familiar references, such as Bugsy
Seigel’s Pink Flamingo Casino and paintings by Magritte, Mondrian,
and de Chirico.
“It is not intended,” comments Riddle
“that the story rely upon people being able to spot the references.”
But he hopes that the allusions imbue the work with a “larger-than-life
quality,” shaping it into a “twentieth-century legend.”
And, obviously, the more recognition, the more surprised moments
of enjoyment. Riddle — a successful cartoonist as well as an
author-artist — has stated emphatically that he writes for “the
fun of it” rather than for a specific audience. If that narrows
his readership, well, so be it.
But it doesn’t!
When he fastens his subtle visual panorama of
popular culture references onto the wings of a disarmingly simple
text and plot, the result soars straight and true right across age
barriers. So while the book is not intended for fledgling readers,
they’re bound to appreciate its story on the simplest level.
It’s not a book strictly for older readers the way The
Watertower seems to be. The Great Escape from City Zoo
is a book that just is — gently clever, exquisitely
designed, rich with allusion. It also seems likely to find itself
a devoted audience. And among the lucky ones are bound to be a dedicated
cache of older readers.
| Critic
and reviewer Karen Jameyson is currently on the editorial staff
of the New South Wales School Magazine. |
 |
From the March/April 1998 issue of The
Horn Book Magazine

More pictures for
older readers
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