Wednesday, August 16, 2023

Pocket Treasure by Wenda Shurety illustrated by Juliana Oakley


Allira loves her dress with pockets because she can carry her precious things, keep her hands warm and give her a place to store all the treasures she finds along the way:

"But best of all, her pockets were perfect for holding treasures inside, like sparkly trinkets, garden gifts, and many special bits and bobs."

Then over the following pages we see Allira give each of these bits and bobs to her class mates - acts of generosity and spontaneous kindness. By playtime, though, her pockets are empty and Allira really wants to decorate the huge mud cake she has made for her teacher's birthday. Now think of the expression 'one good turn deserves another'. Each of Allira's friends come to the rescue offering things from their own pockets to decorate the cake. Oh and the teacher has the most affirming and perfect reaction when she sees her cake. Then you can go back and look at the illustration where all her pocket contents are scattered around Allira - it would be fun to match these with each child and then identify the reason for her gift. 

At the start of this book I thought here we go again - another book about girls who like clothes with pockets [I always love my pockets] BUT then I discovered this book is SO much more. And this will sound unpatriotic but I was amazed to discover this book is Australian. I have not heard of either the author or the illustrator before today.

Wanda Shurety from Booktopia: Born in London, Wenda Shurety travelled extensively as part of her studies to become a research scientist before developing a love of writing stories for children. She now lives in Brisbane. Pocket Treasure is Wenda's second picture book with Affirm Press, following the successful Backyard Magic.




Juliana Oakley is an illustrator from Latvia based in Bahrain.

I do hope Affirm Press have entered this book for the 2024 Children's Book of the Year award [Early Childhood] because I think this book could easily make the Notable list. The final end paper, which defines each of the children's names and how this relates to the word treasure, truly adds a layer of delight to this story.

As I said this book is about so much more than pockets but that topic could be a fun mini theme in a preschool so here are some other books to explore:





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