"There is an opening. A mouth.
What can we find in the dark?
Grandmother shares her light.
My lamp shivers.
We are swallowed!"
I have missed seeing Barbara Reid's wonderful work. So, I was thrilled to receive this new book in the mail last week. Not only because of the incredible illustrations; it is a story for the hearts of anyone who loves to tell stories or read them to children.
The inspiration for the telling is a visit that Barbara made to see the cave art in the Vezere Valley in France. She lets readers know what a thrill it was to view the art in person. Seeing those ancient drawings, including a child's handprint, allowed to her think about the art that the children of today make at school and at home. It reminded her that they are not that different than those who came before them. It led her to imagine her own cave and use it to shape this family story of hunters and gatherers.
It is a story from long ago, and is narrated by a young child whose community follows the animals that provide what they need for a good life. They stop when the animals stop. Working together, they do what it takes to set up camp and make a meal for all. As they pack up to move on, they follow Grandmother. She knows where to find the stories they seek. As they move into a deep cave, they carry fire to light the darkness of the interior. Finding the images they seek is reason for celebration.
"Grandmother stops. "Look."
ANIMALS! Deer, Bison, horses!
They turn; they look. The animals play in our light."
The visitors examine the stories drawn on the cave walls. The child feels a special affinity to a shy mammoth. Together, they all make their marks on the walls, then sing and dance the stories they want to tell. Mammoth joins in. They exit the cave.
"I am a story hunter. I carry stories."
Barbara Reid's art makes it clear that the world itself is more important that those who inhabit it. The natural world is wide blue skies, vast horizons and starry nights, while the intimacy and darkness of the cave sparks visitors to find inspiration in the stories already there and to leave their own mark for those who come after them.



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