In the garden Spirit's handkerchief sail helps her glide across the lily pond. Over the coming days the little girl takes Spirit into larger and larger bodies of water. At night, in her dreams, she imagines herself on board her boat oiling the hull, polishing the deck, tightening the sails. But this little vessel is fragile. What will happen when she is pushed against the rocks?
"I searched for her, left and right. Where was she? There! I plummeted into the reeds. I lifted my broken Spirit and cradled her. All through the night, I tended her, and mended her, from this and that. By morning I knew Spirit was not broken. She was stronger. My Spirit was stronger than ever before."
How did I miss this book back in 2018? And how did the CBCA miss it in their 2019 Notables? This is one of those special books you could share with your younger group aged 6+ and also with upper Primary readers. Christina Booth is a fabulous Australian illustrator - you can see more of her books here. We (IBBY Australia) did contact Christina Booth asking if she might like to participate in our Mini Masterpiece art auction. If we run this again in 2027 I hope we can entice her to support us - I would love to own a piece of her art.
Spirit is a NSW Premier's Reading Challenge title. If you read PRC titles your library Spirit is a K-2 PRC title [31130] or you could encourage a teacher of Grades 4-6 to share this with their class. Sailing fans will enjoy all the nautical references but there are also deeper themes to consider and discuss.
Here is an interview with the author and a quote:
Approximately five years ago, I came up with a story idea, which I originally called ‘My ship won’t sink’ which was about a child going through some difficult times and he turned his bed into a pirate-style ship and added planks and all sort of bits to it whenever he felt he needed to add strength to his life. That story sat in my mind for a long time while I worked on other things. One day, I was driving to work when the story began to change in my mind and I pulled over my car and scribbled it onto the back of a receipt in my glove box as I knew that this was how the story was meant to be. At that stage it was called ‘Hope’ but other than a few small changes, it was very similar to the final story. I learned that a child’s first sailing boat is called an ‘Opti’ which is short for ‘Optimists’ and I thought that concept also captured my story.
Companion book:


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