Stone Age Boy
S**M
Time travel with Satoshi Kitamura
This is a deceptively modest, simple little picture book by a brilliant writer & illustrator for children.Read it with your child.A boy falls down a sort of rabbit hole in a forest - oblique reminder of Alice here - is this perhaps a dream? - and finds himself alone in another era of the world. Until he finds a new friend, who brings him to her family!I can't imagine a better introduction to the idea of prehistoric times, to people long ago very like us, living very differently from us. I'm a grown up and I learned about a few stone age cultural techniques - so you can too.You will learn about hunting, celebrating, family life, crafts and arts - and cave paintings. The illustrations are detailed & accurate depictions - advice was taken from the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford - but they are not insistently didactic, not like instructive illustrations for a children's encyclopedia. There's emotion and imaginative intensity in Kitamura's picture story telling, always. The child of the modern world bonds easily with our ancestorsUnsurprising then to find this boy back in our world years later, working as an archaeologist, seeking traces of his former friends and driven by a deep sense of connection that derives from his early absorption in their long ago lives.(This suggestion makes sense to a generation whose earliest acquaintance with history was emotional identification. Children of 7 might be asked to imagine a day in the life of Hugh the Norman page.)Always, looking at Kitamura's picture stories, with their apparently artless, minimal narratives, I'm reminded of the richness of children's inner stories, often hidden to adult eyes. The simplicity of the text contrasts with the glorious adventure and joy of the inner world. "What if..." and "Let's pretend..." are never far away. "In The Attic" is a startling evocation of the distance between that childish stream of consciousness, the flow of rich imagery and imaginings running parallel to our adult perceptions of everyday experience.Story telling, children are making sense of the world even long before verbal invention appears.So read this slowly with your child, taking all the time in the world to talk about the pictures.Later, read Stig of the Dump together. Similar mood but time travel from the past into the future. A stone age boy lives resourcefully on the margins of our civilization and brings his child friend back - briefly, hauntingly- to the times of Stonehenge.
M**T
One-time read
Very nice way of presenting to kids how people used to do things a long long time ago, when they didn’t have forks or plates, or any plastic things (all things kids now take for granted as part of their daily routines). My kids followed in wonder as we went through it. It conveyed the message well. They got it. And moved on. It’s not the kind of book that kids want to read over and over again. I understand other reviewers who described it as boring. I would say, for homeschooling purposes, when you are looking to convey a piece of the evolution story with a nice book (i couldn’t have explained it better myself !), it works very well. Just don't expect an all-time favourite bedtime story.
T**B
Nice easy story to introduce children to the topic
I bought this book during the summer holidays, as I heard that stone age will be a topic at the beginning of year 3 (KS2, engl primary school), and both, my 7- and 5-year old daughters very much enjoyed the story. It is a nice, easy to understand story that introduces kids to the topic in an interesting way. At the end my younger daughter was excited and wanted to know, if stone age people really existed, still existed, if this was only a dream that the boy had or if it 'happened in real life...
L**R
Nice book
Lovely pictures , nice story . My grandson liked it very much
A**R
Un cuento sobre la edad de piedra
Un cuento muy bonito
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