Showing posts with label Bob Graham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bob Graham. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Oscar's Half Birthday by Bob Graham


"Today is Oscar's birthday. Well, not really his birthday - he is six months old. The truth is no one can wait for his whole birthday."

I have been reading and re-reading all of my Bob Graham books for a secret project. I have talked about or at least mentioned Oscar's Half Birthday here on this blog many times but I didn't have a post exclusively about this wonderful story. 

You might like to begin by stretching the cover out to see front and back. Oscar is sitting with his cake  and half a candle on the cover while his sister Millie heads over to him with her trademark dinosaur glove and fairy wings. By the way we later discover it is a chocolate cake - yum. 

The title page also stretches over two spreads and as it often the way with city scenes by Bob Graham there are so many tiny details to explore such as the lady sunbaking on her roof; the shops such as Guitar city which has a huge guitar on the roof, the donut on the donut shop and the burger on the top of Burgerland; you will also see several washing lines on the top of high city buildings and flocks of pigeons (Bob Graham puts pigeons in so many of his scenes).

Now zoom in on the same page and you will see a small hill with a park on the top - this is where we are heading for the birthday - up to Bellevue Hill - but first we need to meet the family so turn the page. Dad is wrapping the tuna sandwiches for their picnic and mum is sitting with Oscar and his big sister Millie on their comfy couch. 


The walk across the city involves crossing a pedestrian bridge. You can also see one of these in Queenie the Bantam and Spirit of Hope. They set out their picnic and everyone admires young Oscar and also Millie's fairy wings but even better when the family start to sing Happy Birthday everyone around the park joins in. 


After the singing we have a full page illustration of Oscar and these beautiful lines:

"Oscar sits titled at an angle, his fingers curled into Millie's tuna sandwich. HIs shoulders are hunched, his head nods and the sun shines through his ears, lighting them up like little lanterns."

Back at home the kids have a bath - notice the candles in the soap dish. Millie gifts her dinosaur glove briefly to Oscar and we learn that the next birthday will be Millie herself with four candles on her cake.


This is a book to own, cherish and read on the occasion of every birthday in your family while your kids are young. 

Graham magnificently captures the essence of a six-month-old: “Oscar frowns in the dim light—six different expressions on his face in the time it takes a leaf to fall.” Millie is an adorable older sister, clearly infatuated with Oscar. Kirkus

Talking about another Bob Graham book (The Concrete Garden) Kirkus said his work is:

Deft, understated loveliness.

I am sure you are familiar with Bob Graham but if not here is a good summary of some of his titles from The School Library Journal

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Buffy: An Adventure Story by Bob Graham


Buffy is an assistant to Brillo the Magician but he is not famous. In fact, we see his home is a cardboard box outside the theatre and on the poster advertising the show Buffy's name appears in tiny writing right at the bottom. The trouble is Buffy is becoming more popular than Brillo and so one night he is kicked out into the rain. Yes, it is pure jealousy.


Bookseller blurb: This is an enchanting adventure story about a performing dog. Buffy is a performing dog with HUGE talents. He can play the harmonica, tap-dance and do magic tricks. But when he outshines his master the magician, Buffy is in the doghouse. Kicked out onto the street to fend for himself, Buffy has the blues...until sweet Mary Kelly bursts into his life like a fanfare from Heaven! At last, after all his wanderings, he finds someone who really appreciates his extraordinary talents.

I have been talking about a few Bob Graham books this month because I discovered there are titles I previously had not mentioned here but should have. Buffy was published in 1999, and I well remember reading it to groups of students in my former school library when Buffy was shortlist by the CBCA in 2000 for their Picture Book of the Year award. That copy was a larger format hard cover - mine now is a small format paperback. Sadly, Buffy is now out of print but I am sure you will find a copy in most school libraries here in Australia. In the US Buffy is called Benny.


If you are familiar with Bob Graham books you will recognise the logo on this truck - YES, it is from Max. In fact, there are references to Max in so many other Bob Graham books (like a story within a story) - such as in Ellie's Dragon when Ellie goes to the movies and on the big screen, we see Max. This idea builds on from an earlier one seen in Tales from the Waterhole, where Morris and Billy are seen watching Max on their television. This symbol is also on a tanker truck in Home in the Rain because that is the brand of the petrol station and that same tanker is also seen in A Bus called Heaven.


Companion books:







Friday, January 16, 2026

Spirit of Hope by Bob Graham





When you read a book by Bob Graham it is so important to slow down and notice all the tiny details and also you should plan to re-read each book several times because I am certain you will make new discoveries.

On the half title page of Spirit of Hope there is a tiny toy Noah's ark sitting on a Noah's ark storybook. On the title page we see an industrial scene with one huge factory spewing black smoke and a road filled with various trucks. Zoom in closer and there is also a tiny house with a yellow roof. Turn the page and we move closer to the scene. People, including the Fairweather family, are crossing a bridge across the highway walking with dad to the factory gate. It is dirty work so:

"Six nights a week Dad returned from work. The welcome he received was second to none. Each night he made the journey to the bathroom on his hands and knees. ... Dad washed off the oil from the factory. He scrubbed his nails, ten little black crescent moons in a sea of foam."




Once Dad is clean the games can begin - sailing the high seas on their kitchen table boat with a different child captain each night - Lily or Cecily or Micky or Duggy or Sammy or Mary. Along with Jock the dog, Bumper and Thumper, and Trevor the tortoise."

The Fairweathers have a happy life and weekly delicious picnics down on the dock until ... there is a knock at the door and they are told they have to move. 


Bob Graham often includes rainbows in his stories.


It seems impossible to find a new house until ... Mum sees the toy Mary has been holding. Remember that toy Noah's ark - perhaps their little house can be like a boat and move to a new location. 

The ship at the dock is called Spirit of Hope and mum says "We must not despair.  We must keep up a Spirit of Hope."




If you are in the US there have been minor changes to the text of Spirit of Hope - ginger beer at the picnic is now root beer for example. 

Companion book:


I have been re-reading my collection of books by Bob Graham. I own around 40 of his titles - I have a short list of books still to collect such as Zoltan the Magnificent; The Trouble with Dogs; Ellie's Dragon; Vanilla Ice Cream and The Posey Ring. Spirit of Hope was published in 1993 but I have no memory of reading it to students in my school library. I loved exploring it for this post. 

With Bob Graham books you should look for light and shade and spotlighting; zooming in and zooming out; foreshadowing; cozy rooms filled with shelves of books and soft chairs; families reading books together; clocks and calendars (the one in this book has a lighthouse picture); pets like the rabbits we met in The Wild; scattered toys; and family love.


Sunday, August 31, 2025

A Hatful of Dreams by Bob Graham



From this warm and loving house at the end of the street, dreams take flight and light the way to a brighter tomorrow. A heartfelt tale of hope and love, perfect for children and grandparents to share together, written and illustrated by master storyteller Bob Graham. Walker Books

From the front cover with that large, pink comfy chair, reminiscent of Let's get a Pup, to the title page which links so beautifully with Rose meets Mr Wintergarten and of course the little family who have surely stepped off the pages of Oscar's First Birthday - all fans of Bob Graham will be filled with happiness that we can once again enter his story world. Oh, and you will surely recognise grandad - yes, I am sure this is Bob Graham himself. 


Illustration from Oscar's Half Birthday

I collect books by Bob Graham so I went back and looked at these three books plus a couple of others. Have you noticed the way Bob Graham often highlights the cozy family home and his illustrations contrast this against the surrounding neighborhood for example the lightning bolt house in Max or the new house in Rose meets Mr Wintergarten. 


Houses from Max; Grandad's Magic and Rose Meet Mr Wintergarten

The title page of A Hatful of Dreams

Bob Graham is also a master of the interiors of homes. You need to take your time to notice little details such as a discarded teddy bear, washing up on the sink, slippers, the art on the walls, and the really comfortable furniture. Bob Graham is also a master of warm hugs.


Illustration from Let's Get a Pup - a comfy lounge


Illustration from Grandad's Magic - another comfy lounge

Some other things to delight you in A Hatful of Dreams: 

  • The end papers show Millie and Sonny playing tether tennis (I loved this game when I was young)
  • Chickens, a dog and washing on the clothesline
  • Look for the photo of Grandad with his wife - we can infer she has died but grandad still loves her deeply. I love that this is now an extended family and Grandad has moved in with his daughter and the three young grandchildren
  • Grandad has a tattoo of a bluebird on his hand
  • Here is a beautiful phrase "Maggie! Top of the pile, her tail wagging, with a puppy smell of fresh walnuts."
  • You can link this book with the theme of urban renewal - we also saw this in the book A Bus Called Heaven
  • "Wrappers off toffees" - go back and read Greetings from Sandy Beach - yes there are toffees there too

Blurb Penguin Random House Canada: The Mile End Road once sparkled in sunshine and children’s laughter, until hard times came and all the people left, taking with them the sun, moon, and stars. But one family stayed on this broken-down street: the Andersons, in their house with a warm little glow, where kids bounce happily on Dad’s back, and Grandad’s fingers squeak on guitar strings as he jokes about all the secrets and dreams he keeps under his hat. “Grandad, I’ve seen you without your hat,” insists Millie, “and nothing was there except your hair.” But what will the children see the next time he doffs his hat? As always with Bob Graham, the tenderness is in the details: strewn-about stuffies, tumbling children, a blue-jeaned grandad with one leg thrown over his chair arm. It’s a story where even a derelict neighborhood can spark back to life, and where the love of a playfully bantering grandad can conjure a whole universe of light.



Briony Stewart introduces the slogan here.

Today the CBCA announced the 2026 Book Week slogan or as some people call it the theme - A Symphony of Stories. There is plenty of time of course but I am sure you will want to gather a collection of picture books with musical references. In A Hatful of Dreams grandad has composed a little tune. He plays a fragment of it on his harmonica and mum joins in with her violin. Oh, I need to mention there is a harmonica (can you spy it) on the limited edition print Bob Graham did for IBBY Australia many years ago.


IBBY Australia limited edition print by Bob Graham
Notice the harmonica which links with his newest book A Hatful of Dreams

Thursday, October 5, 2023

The Hush Treasure Book and exhibition



This travelling exhibition designed by Books Illustrated showcases the original art for The Hush Treasure Book, created by 20 of Australia's best-loved illustrators. You'll see preliminary sketches and developmental work, as well as the final published art in all its forms, bringing to life this treasure trove of stories, poems and pictures by Australia's favourite storytellers. Scroll to the end of this post for an exciting IBBY Australia art auction with pieces by some of these famous names!

The authors and illustrators in The Hush Treasure Book and exhibition include – Nick Bland, Karen Briggs, Kevin Burgemeestre, Michael Camilleri, Jackie French, Jane Goodwin, Bob Graham, Jacqui Grantford, Mark Greenwood, Ann James, Danny Katz, Frane Lessac, Alison Lester, Chris McKimmie, Doug McLeod, Glenda Millard, Stephen Michael King, Tohby Riddle, Victoria Rohan, Judith Rossell, Paul Seden, Craig Smith, Shaun Tan, Jane Tanner, Karen Tayleur, Mitch Vane, Julie Vivas, Anna Walker, Bruce Whatley, Margaret Wild.

If you subscribe to The Story Box Library you will enjoy hearing and seeing several stories and poems from this anthology. 

Entries vary from very short to moderately long, from the heart-achingly emotive to the fun, fast and fantabulous. Illustrations are also varied in style and type, making this a true feast of endless surprises as pages are flicked. The book includes a bonus CD featuring a special compilation of Hush music compositions. Kids' Book Review

This is a book that will be adored by families, should have wide use in schools, and is perfect for anyone who appreciates the amazing range of talent we have in Australian children’s books. Readings

I first heard Dr Catherine Crock, a pediatrician at the Royal Children’s Hospital Melbourne talk about her project of music to help children in hospital back in 2018 at a talk at our Sydney City Recital Hall as a part of their series This Sounds like Science

Read more about The Hush Foundation here. They have many CDs with music played by the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra. You can buy the book from 2015 on their website too. I think this book might already be in many school libraries - I remember seeing it in my former school library. 

Now to talk about the book. This is a splendid anthology for all ages. There are several very special poems, a story with no words, a brilliant ghost story and a magical ride on a seahorse.


The book opens with a poem by Jane Godwin illustrated by Anna Walker.  Here is a tiny extract:

"Let us go then, take my hand,
Let's run down the track and onto the sand.
Let's crawl through the tunnel, let's cross the sea,
We'll go together, you and me."



The story The Best horse of all features a carousel ride and a magical seahorse. The story is by Margaret Wild illustrated by Julie Vivas.

Dot the Tot is a lively little girl who cannot sit still.  Ann James perfectly captures her bounce and energy.



Bob Graham has written a gentle and poignant poem about a man and his old dog. 

The ghost story by Jackie French will give you shivers - it would be a perfect story to read aloud to a group of children in your class or library aged 9+.

Here is an extract from the poem by Glenda Millard (you know I love her language skills):

"I am the falling star
you are the wishful hands
catch me."

I do love anthologies - they are perfect for casual teachers, classrooms, libraries and also for families. My most favourite story and poetry anthology from here in Australia (sadly long out of print) is this one - it is the same book with two different covers:




If you love Australian children's picture book illustrators save the date - IBBY Australia are holding a mini masterpiece art auction and many of the famous names in The Hush Treasure Book have pieces in our auction including Ann James, Bob Graham, and Frane Lessac.



Jigsaw: a Puzzle in the Post by Bob Graham


Why were the Kelly's sent this parcel in the post? We will never know nor do we know who sent it but it was a perfect gift. Bob Graham has given us a wise and thought-provoking book with appeal to a very wide range of ages. Inside the parcel is a jigsaw - many of us remember spending time during those lockdown years (2020-2022) completing and then swapping jigsaws. The father has a very special watch which shows the seasons. This can be interpreted as a reference to how we marked time during lockdown rather than day by day or minute by minute. How wonderful that Dad is the family member with the patience and perseverance to keep going with the puzzle all through Spring and Summer. But alas when the puzzle is finished one piece is missing. Mum has a flashback moment where she remembers the day the rubbish was collected. 

The family jump in their little red car (like the one in Home in the Rain) and head off to the paper recycling centre. But this task seems impossible. Luckily themes of optimism, small miracles and hope ooze out of this book – Katie says they WILL find the puzzle piece even though we, as readers, see the enormous pile of paper at the recycling plant. This task looks even more impossible from the way the illustration shows the tiny family dwarfed by the towering pile of papers. I love the way Katie misinterprets the phrase wishful thinking and says: ‘let’s wish’

There are three double pages where the family hunt for the missing piece. Over these spreads, readers are given an insight in to the lives and memories of other people through an inventory of their discarded photos, magazines, newspapers, letters and tickets. These pages are worth lingering over. I spied a very early book by Bob Graham - Pete and Roland

Sadly, the family head home - it seems they didn't find that tiny puzzle piece - or did they? Your young reading companion will exclaim with delight because they will know something utterly wonderful before the family make their discovery. 

This is a delightful, intimate and affirming family story. The end papers perfectly bookend the story when we see the jigsaw at the beginning with one missing piece and the finished puzzle at the end and this echoes the plot and the all-important happy and very satisfying ending. The jigsaw is an African sunrise - a morning scene filled with promise for a new day, and which will be enjoyed in the family's suburban lounge room with exotic animals. This puzzle itself is reminiscent of an early book by Bob Graham (Tales from the Waterhole) but there is no need for any familiarity with that book. 


There are so many tiny details to explore in the illustrations – fragments that reward close inspection and revisiting: the stamps on the parcel and the stamps on the envelope containing the thank you letter; the scattered papers as the family walk away from the recycling centre; and the scene on the title page where we can see the mail delivery truck and the postbox which the family then visit at the end of the book. Make sure you tilt the cover to see the laminated overlay of puzzle pieces. 

Notice the way the painting near their front door changes from a flying kangaroo to a lighthouse – I have no idea why, but I love the curiosity of this. This is one of many topics for speculation and discussion about this book. 

The children have alliterative names - Kitty Kelly and Katie Kelly perfect for reading aloud. The wordless pages are brilliant – I can imagine children giggling when they read this book and see the lost piece stuck to the dog and then ending up in the garbage truck. 

Notice also the repeated imagery of shoes and the soles of shoes all of which anticipate the ending when the piece comes home on Dad’s boot. My favourite page is the one where we see an image of legs as the family walk away empty handed – the body language in this illustration is so powerful. Also think about the way time is a character in this book. We have seen this idea before by Bob Graham in Silver Buttons.

Jigsaw: a puzzle in the post was an Early Childhood Children's Book Council of Australia Short listed book. I did hope with all my heart that it would WIN. This book, as with all Bob Graham books, should be added to every school and public library - here in Australia and beyond.

The CBCA judges said: The Kelly family embraces a mysterious puzzle anonymously sent to them in the post. The subplot narrates how a puzzle piece falls to the ground and goes missing while the family undertakes the long project of completing the puzzle. These parallel storylines continue throughout the book. Serendipitously, their threads do cross paths, and the reader is privy to this, while the characters are not. Themes of family, the generosity of strangers, persistence, hope, determination and serendipity are explored. Beautiful illustrations vary from small vignettes, time-lapse, and full-page double spreads. The use of framing and white backgrounds help to focus attention and are used to effect, while the language is simple and economical, yet magical. The mystery of time, and the slowness of its passage, are beautifully mirrored through the almost tragic journey that the puzzle piece takes to ‘the end of the world’, as it were. Without being didactic, Bob Graham shows that we may discover lost things, and enable things of value to return to consciousness when we have the courage to look into dark places and acknowledge our own flawed human nature.

Very strangely this book has a different title in the US:



Horn Book: "Graham's fan will know to expect a miracle. His squiggly, interrupted pen line can render even a pile of wastepaper dynamic, and the cadence of the text makes the ordinary grand."

Here is the publisher blurb: “Oh, let’s do it!” say Kitty and Katy and Mum when a thousand-piece jigsaw puzzle mysteriously arrives in the post. “I have time on my hands,” agrees Dad. Starting in winter with the edges, by autumn they’re almost done, only to discover that one piece is missing. Mum is sure that it must have accidentally gone out with the rubbish, so the Kelly's pile into the car to comb through the local tip (“shouldn’t take long”). There they uncover forgotten letters, train tickets, discarded newspapers, and old photos yellow with age, but finding the missing piece is starting to seem like wishful thinking. “Let’s wish, then,” says Katy. As in all of Bob Graham’s work, the beauty here is in the details, with visual perspectives that offer a bird’s-eye view or take us underfoot, wordless sequences letting us in on a secret. Is it sheer luck – or perhaps the power of hope – that creates an ending to the story?

Our Storybox Library made a video of this book - here is a preview. Here are teachers notes and ideas for discussion from the publisher Walker Books. If you click on the label Bob Graham at the bottom of this post you will find details of heaps of his other splendid books. I'm sure the dog in this new book is really Rosie from Let's Get a Pup - do you agree?

Graham infuses his characters with a universal humanity. Mum, Dad, the children and the dog could be any of us. His families are always inspiring as they work together on a problem, promoting hope, radiating love and a togetherness we all aspire to emulate. Fran Knight ReadPlus

Every book from Bob Graham is a celebration. This acclaimed, adored Australian picture book maker has empathy, warmth, humanity and insightfulness brimming from every stroke of his pens and ink. Bookwagon loves Jigsaw: A Puzzle in the Post and recommends it all the way Down Under and back again to every bedtime reader. Book Wagon

Friday, August 4, 2023

Generosity - using picture books to explore this topic

-





"I’m looking for picture books with the theme of generosity"

This question was posed on a Facebook forum this morning. Over 190 people responded with ideas so I thought it might be a good idea to collate some of their suggestions. 

The most mentioned and most controversial title that came up over and over again was The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein but it not a book that appeals to me at all. Many respondents also mentioned The Rainbow Fish but I found this book very odd when I re-read it recently so it would not be one that I could recommend. 

One person also suggested look at books by Jory John - these are terrific. I need to re-read all them with a different lens and think about generosity.


I am fairly sure the question came from someone in the US and clearly most of the answers were from the US too so no one mentioned Rose meets Mr Wintergarten by Bob Graham or the international title The Little Night Cat. Tonight I also thought of Little Robin Red Vest and In a Cloud of Dust.  On the post thread I listed Shelter and The Biscuit Maker. 

Here are some I have talked about or read previously with the theme of generosity:


Shelter- every every library should own this book





















Here are some that you might have predicted:





Here are some I plan to read: