Showing posts with label Robert Ingpen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Ingpen. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

The Little Bookroom Melbourne

 


The Little Bookroom opened its doors to the public on Friday the 13th October, 1960. Albert Ullin OAM, after studying literature and languages and working extensively in the booktrade in Australia and internationally, decided to focus his love for contemporary children’s literature and illustration into an Australian first: he would open a bookshop devoted solely to children’s books. Albert named his shop for a collection of whimsical short stories by Eleanor Farjeon who wrote on the occasion of the shop’s opening: “I am proud and happy to know you’ve chosen the title of my book for the title of your Bookshop in the City my Father first set foot in the 1850s when he emigrated to Australia as a boy of 16. The stories he told me of his arrival in Melbourne have always made it seem to be one of ‘my’ cities. Thankyou for giving me a home in it".  (Source)


On my last visit to Melbourne, I saw a social media post that books from the famous children's bookstore The Little Bookroom were heavily discounted. I couldn't take advantage of that because I had to catch my plane. Then I read that the store had closed but a new owner had been found. After some wonderful crowd funding the store is set to reopen soon. The new owner Michael Earp has asked some very famous Australian illustrators to reimagine the famous shop logo. Over twenty responded. I am sharing a selection here. The real logo will not change but I love this idea as a way to promote the store. People who have supported the crowd funding initiative will be sent one of these limited-edition cards - it is not too late.

Here is the new address: 

Little Bookroom
Woi-wurrung Country
8 Village Avenue, Brunswick East, VIC 3057



BIG NEWS

IBBY Australia are running their second Mini Masterpiece art auction later this year to raise funds so we can pay our IBBY.org international membership. 
Several of the wonderful illustrators you can see in this post who contributed to the project for The Little Bookroom have accepted our invitation too.  
You can read about our 2023 auction here
Our 2025 auction will run from 14 November to 28 November. 


I am so lucky to own two pieces of art by Ann James - one from
It's Miroocool and the other from Bird and Bear


Take a look at this post to see more books by Anna Walker
Her new book is titled Between


Check out my post about The Truck Cat



IBBY Australian selected a book by Freya Blackwood for the
prestigious IBBY International Honour Book list in 2016 - Banjo and Ruby Red
and her fabulous book The Boy and the Elephant is now part of the 
very important Silent book collection which are books that are shared with
refugee children on the island of Lampedusa. 
Her book Afloat was a CBCA Picture Book of the Year 2025 Honour title.


Check out my post about South with the Seabirds which has links to 
other fabulous books illustrated by Jess McGeachin


Here is my 2022 Meet the Illustrator post featuring Tohby Riddle
He has a fun new book called Cynthia is a wild dog.
My favourite book is Nobody Owns the Moon



Here is my Meet the Illustrator post for Jess Racklyeft


Be Careful, Xiao Xin! by Sher Rill Ng was the winner of the  IBBY Ena Noel Award



Sara Acton is the illustrator who created the fabulous cover for the award winning book Runt.
I was lucky enough to submit the winning bid for the picture of Runt at our 2023 IBBY Mini Masterpiece
art auction. Here is my previous post Meet the Illustrator Sara Acton


Robert Ingpen won the prestigious Hans Christian Andersen award in 1986.
You can use the label 'Robert Ingpen' to see the books I have shared here on this blog. 
The most recent one is Who is the World for?



You can see books illustrated by Matt Shanks here.


Read more about Gabrielle Wang here.


A new and important book by Andrew Joyner written with Beth Ferry is


Meet the Illustrator Gabriel Evans
His newest book is Scotty and the Scotties
 

Illustrators who contributed to the Little Bookroom project: (Instagram link)

Allison Colpoys
Andrew Joyner @andypjoyner
Ann James @annjamesillustrator
Anna McGregor @annamcgregorau
Anna Walker @_annawalker_
Ben Wood @benwoodillustrator
Briony Stewart @briony_stewart
Daniel Gray-Barnett @dgraybarnett
Danny Snell @dannydsnell
Evie Barrow @evie_barrow
Freya Blackwood @freyablackwood
Gabriel Evans @gabrielevansart
Gabrielle Wang @gabriellewangbooks
Graeme Base @graemebase
Jess McGeachin @jessmcgeachin
Jess Racklyeft @jessesmess
Lucinda Gifford @lucindagifford
Matt Shanks @matt_shanks
Renée Treml @reneetreml
Robert Ingpen
Sara Acton @saraacton_illustration
Sher Rill Ng @sherrill.ng
Sophie Beer @sophiebeerdraws
Tohby Riddle @tohbyriddle



Thursday, February 8, 2024

Broken Beaks by Nathaniel Lachenmeyer illustrated by Robert Ingpen



"Then, one morning the young sparrow awoke to discover that his beak had broken while he slept. It does not happen often, but sometime a sparrow's beak will break. No one knows how or why it happens. It just does."

Now it is so difficult for the young sparrow to pick up crumbs dropped by people at the cafe. Sadly, the other sparrow are either frightened of him, or suspicious of him while others are sure someone else will help the young sparrow. The people are no better. To their eyes this bird looks dirty and ugly. 

Luckily along comes a compassionate stranger - a homeless man. 

"He was thin and dirty. He had a bushy beard and long scraggly hair, and he talked to himself. The sparrow could tell from his voice that he was sad and lonely."

"Looking closely at the stranger, the young sparrow realised that they were alike. He somehow knew that the stranger also had a broken beak- only his beak was on the inside, where you couldn't see it. ... Like the sparrow, the stranger couldn't help that his beak was broken."

Now go back and think about the title - broken beaks. The bird has a broken beak and so does the man but readers should also think about the reactions of others (bird and human) - how we view others who are different, or who need compassion. 

The final scene in this book is sure to break your heart. This book has a personal connection with the author. 

Blurb: A beautiful story about a friendship between a small sparrow and a homeless man. Readers of all ages will be moved by this powerful narrative, which highlights the heroism and dignity of people with mental illness. Beautiful full colour illustrations drawn with depth and insight by former Hans Christian Andersen Medalist Robert Ingpen. 

Broken Beaks is long out of print and I think it might be very hard to find. IF you do have a copy it is now very valuable. I have seen copies listed between AU$90 and AU$150.

When I was a CBCA (Children's Book Council of Australia) judge we read Crumbs by Phil Cummings illustrated by Shane Deveries. One of the judges in my category (Picture book of the Year) linked Crumbs with Broken Beaks (2003 and out of print). I love making connections between texts, but I had no idea about Broken Beaks. I was so thrilled to find this book in the school library I visit each week. What an extraordinary wealth of books this library holds. I continue to be so amazed and excited by the books I discover. 

Thursday, February 1, 2024

Who is the World for? by Tom Pow illustrated by Robert Ingpen


Hardcover edition


Paperback edition

Before I begin to describe this book I need to tell you it was published in 2000 and so yes, it is out of print but it might be in a library - I do hope so.

"Who is the world for? the baby bear asks her mother as she snuggles into her furry tummy at the mouth of their winter cave."

The mother explains to her cub about the world with caves, spring rivers, sunlight, fish and forests.

Next up the lion cub asks his father - who is the world for? and so does the hippo, the baby whale, the arctic hare, the baby owl and so on.

"Why look around you, his mother replies. The world with all its high green trees for you to hoot from and with all its fence posts for you to perch on, all its mushrooms for you to swoop down on towards the tiniest rustling leaf- my dear, the world is a wood and, the world is for you!"


If you can find this book it would be a beautiful present for a new baby or even as a school graduation gift. The art by Robert Ingpen is exquisite. Robert Ingpen won the prestigious Hans Christian Andersen medal in 1986. Take a look here at more of his work. I wish I had the space and money to own every book illustrated by Robert Ingpen - his work is just so wonderful.




Tom Pow was born in Edinburgh in 1950. ...  Primarily a poet, he is the author of five ollections of poetry. Landscapes and Legacies, published in 2003, was shortlisted for the Scottish Book of the Year Award. He has also written radio plays, a travel book about Peru, In the Palace of Serpents (1992), and books for children, including Callum's Big Day (2000) and Who is the World For? (2000), illustrated by Robert Ingpen, which won the Scottish Arts Council Children's Book of the Year Award in 2001. 

Here is the full Kirkus review of What is the world for:

This Scottish poet’s first picture book is a glorious hymn to the resplendent beauty and bounty of mother earth. Youngsters of every species ask their parents “who is the world for?,” to which each parent replies that the world belongs to them, their offspring. “Why, look around you / sings her mother [a whale]. The world / with all its deep roomy seas for you / to voyage through, all its million-kinded fish / that will part for you, all its rich seaweed, / its watery lights, its sea sounds / that speak so clearly to you— / the world is for you!” Pow captures the multifaceted beauty of the earth through the various animals’ responses. Each species treasures something different about their corner of the world: bears revel in the abundant caves and endless forests; lions relish the heat of the plains; while hippos savor the inky mud ponds. Pow’s prose illuminates the consanguinity of the earth’s inhabitants as the terrain moves from the sun-soaked African plains to the starlit sky of a darkened city. When the young boy questions his father about the world, the father’s response encompasses all the previous animals and habitats, definitively declaring that the world belongs to everyone and everything. Ingpen’s full-page pencil and watercolor illustrations are spectacular in their detail and realism. Deft strokes capture the furry majesty of a full-grown mother bear in one picture while minuscule fish glinting in the far-off depths convey the vastness of the seas in another. Combined, the contemplative text and graceful artwork make a heartfelt testimony on behalf of mother earth and her many children.



Saturday, June 3, 2023

River Murray Mary by Colin Thiele illustrated by Robert Ingpen


This is a vintage Australian book first published in 1979 and reprinted in 1990. It was released again in 2002 but that copy is now also out of print. While I don't think it would be any where near as good, the ebook version is still available. 

It seems easy to dismiss old books as having no appeal to "modern" kids but this is such a gripping story of early Australian pioneers and young Mary is a very memorable character. I think this book would be a fabulous family read aloud. Publishers today would probably not produce a picture book like this with 72 pages and full pages of text but this format is very appealing for this long form picture book especially with the beautiful art by Robert Ingpen. In the past there were some terrific long form picture books in Australia such as Rummage by Christobel Mattingley illustrated by Patricia Mullins; Jandy Malone and the Nine O'Clock tiger by Barbara Bolton illustrated by Alan White; and even the famous Storm Boy by Colin Thiele illustrated by Robert Ingpen.


Mary Agnes Baker lives on a farm on the banks of the Murray River in South Australia. Her father was granted this land when he returned from WWI. Mary was born in 1918 and now that she is aged 10 or 11 Australia is entering the years of The Great Depression. Life on the farm is hard with huge tasks like harvesting grapes. They also have to manage the irrigation.

"Mary was never happier than when she was running up and down the rows at irrigation time, the red mud spattered all over her legs or squelching up between her toes like soft brown butter. As soon as the row of fruit trees or vines had been soaked thoroughly her father went back to the main trench, sealed off the gutter that had been flowing and opened up another one at the next row. And so it went on. All through the night he dozed and worked, dozed and worked ..."

"In the winter months there was pruning and ploughing to do and in summer there was picked and dipping and drying. The dipping was the worse part. It had to be done in a tank full of very hot water mixed with caustic soda. ... It was dreadful work in the heat of summer without shelter or shade but it was the only way the sultanas could be made to dry into soft golden fruit for cakes and pudding and buns all over the world."

Early on in the story Mary encounters a tiger snake and as a reader I just knew this snake would be sure to cause havoc later in the story, but before this happens the family and community have to survive a wild hail storm which destroys their crops and then an enormous flood - water coming down the river over many weeks and covering everything close to the river bank and beyond. These scenes are so dramatic - making this story such a powerful page turner.

If you have this book in your school library there are some wonderful passages you could use with a class as examples of very skilled writing:

"A snake was drinking at the riverbank. He lay like a long rope with his head and neck out over the water and the rest of his curving body in the grass on the bank. His scales shone bronze and black in the morning sun as if he had spent the night polishing himself. ... For an instant a little flicker of blue lightning danced along his lips, quicker than the blink of an eye."

"Mary took another step backwards and waited. The river was so calm that the trees along the edge seemed to be standing on a mirror. The sun was warm and soft, and the air was silent.  ... she could have been the only living creature in the world. She and the snake."

"He bought his head round to the bank and his body followed like black glass, like cold molten glass, easily and silently. Such a fluid flowing of flesh and muscles she had never see before. She glimpsed his rippling underbelly as he moved, streaked with red and bands of smoke ... his body poured itself through the grass in a black shining stream, winding and curving by a kind of magic."

I also love the way Mary talks about her dog:

"She had grown up with old Snap, and although he was a big galumphing dog who was forever doing stupid things and then smiling at what he had done, he was such a happy, warm-hearted fellow that he seemed like a brother to everyone."

Sadly, Snap is bitten by that snake and the doctor (who also works as the local vet) is far away but Mary and her father load Snap into their small row boat and rush him to Doc Williams who luckily does have some anti-venene. It is a tense night as Mary watches over her old dog desperate to see him survive. 


If you have a class studying a topic such as "life in the olden days" read the scene on page 32 when Mary's mother sets up her petrol iron!

"Mary was frightened of the iron and she hated using it herself. First the little tank at the back had to be filled with petrol, then the jet had to be ricked, and finally the iron had to be primed. When everything was ready her mother struck a match and there was a moment or two of anguish when flames were likely to stutter all over the place ... but at last the flames in the hollow between the top of the iron and the heavy sole below sank away and the jet settled down to a steady hiss like a vent of steam that had caught a cold."

Colin Thiele is a famous Australian author of books such as Storm Boy; Sun on the Stubble; Blue Fin; and Pannikin and Pinta. 

Robert Ingpen won the IBBY Hans Christian Andersen award in 1986. 












Saturday, December 19, 2020

The Night Before Christmas by Clement C Moore illustrated by Robert Ingpen

 


I am collecting some classic Christmas picture books to gift to three young adult friends. I picked up this small sized (14cmx17cm) edition of The Night Before Christmas with glorious illustrations by Robert Ingpen. It was originally published in 2015. Take a look at this trailer from the publisher Templar.

"This new gift edition brings together the traditional poem with stunning new illustrations by the award-winning Australian artist Robert Ingpen, each one a delightful evocation of this eternally popular work. Robert Ingpen was born in 1936 in Geelong, Australia, and still lives and works nearby in Barwon Heads. In 1986, he was awarded the Hans Christian Andersen Medal for his contribution to children's literature and he has been honoured with Membership of the Order of Australia." Dymocks


The stockings were hung by the chimney with care


He spoke not a word but went straight to his work, and filled all the stockings

Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse.

The original edition of this book which is a full sized picture book has this cover: