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BookDragon Blog

17 Nov / Shadow by Suzy Lee

Shadow Suzy LeeHere’s unforgettable testimony to the endless possibilities of childhood imagination, brought to the page by the phenomenally inventive Korean-born, Singapore-based Suzy Lee.

Surrounded by the usual basement detritus, a little girl climbs on top of two boxes, eating her apple with a mischievous little half-grin on her adorable face, and with literally a single ‘click’ of a lightbulb (!) brings an imaginative adventure to life. To ‘read’ Lee’s latest book is a creative free-for-all: ‘reality’ seems to exist on one side – boots with separating soles, a box of tools, a vacuum cleaner  – while the excitement of a world beyond comes to life in shadows … the hose becomes a hissing snake, the vacuum cleaner sprouts giant flowers, and the airborne little girl grows fangs of her own …

Lee’s simple pages of black and white, with splashes of golden yellow, amplify the message that imagination has no limits. Until she’s called for dinner, the little girl’s adventures multiply and grow until they literally take over the full double-page spread; the real and imagined worlds come together in a moment of sweet empathy, then gleefully bursts with utter joy.

In our overstimulated, overtechnical, overprogrammed lives (what are we doing to our children??!!), Lee provides an unforgettable, necessary reminder that what we really need most to be happy is just our imagination.

As a Luddite, might I also add that Lane Smith’s recent It’s a Book (which has a totally different energy) makes for a perfect companion to Shadow, as well …

Readers: Children

Published: 2010

By SIBookDragon in Children/Picture Books, Fiction, Korean Tags > BookDragon, Kiddie fun, Shadow, Suzy Lee
5 Comments
  • Marjorie Simmons

    I am an author of, The Gift Box That Meant Everything. I will have to read this book Shadow, it sound very interesting.
    Author Marjorie Simmons,
    The Gift Box That Meant Everything

    Reply
    • SI BookDragon

      I’ve really been enjoying wordless and nearly-wordless picture books recently. I’ll be adding another Suzy Lee title (textless, too) sometime very soon, called Mirror. You might like to take a look at that, as well. Seemingly simple, but also very clever premise.

      Another wordless book with the same title (!) — Mirror by Jeannie Baker — is stupendous. You’ll find that Mirror currently posted on this blog.

      Thanks very much for visiting BookDragon. Please come back again soon … Always another book to read!

      Reply
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  • indu nair

    Awsome!!! its a fun and i will really enjoying wordless book. I lked three of us.

    Reply

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