An almost single-color picture book tracks the path of grief, ending with the uplifting new beginning of a budding friendship based on understanding. When the little bird dies, his friend the bear is inconsolable. Full of grief, he locks himself in his house and ventures out again only when the smell of young spring grass blows through his window. He always carries a small box, which he opens for no one. He meets a wildcat who understands his need to carry the box. As the cat plays on her violin, the bear remembers all the beauty he experienced with the little bird. Now he can bury his friend, keeping him alive in his memories and feelings. The Bear and the Wildcat shows a way through paralyzing grief and simultaneously tells the story of a hopeful new friendship.
Kazumi Yumoto was born in Tokyo, Japan in 1959. She studied music composition at Tokyo College and during this time wrote opera libretti and plays for radio and television. Her books, mostly novels for older children, have won numerous international awards. After graduating from Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, Komako Sakai worked at a kimono textile design company. She is currently one of the most popular children's author/illustrators in Japan, and has been successfully published in the US by Chronicle Books and Arthur A. Levine books.
Title: The Bear and the Wildcat
Author: Yumoto, Kazumi
ISBN: 9781877467707
Binding:
Publisher: Gecko Press
Publication Date: 2011-06-01
Number of Pages:
Weight: 0.3993 kg
If grieving people are allowed to grieve, then they will find their way back to the joy of life - that's the message of this delicate Japanese book.
-- Hella Kemper * Die Zeit *
This extraordinary picture book tells the story of a bear whose best friend, a small bird, has died. The reader follows Bear as he mourns his companion but also as he begins to find renewed meaning in his life following a chance encounter with a musical cat. This powerful story deals with one of life's most complicated and painful aspects with delicacy and honesty. Intricately layered pencil illustration accompanies the tale to create a story that is very moving but also filled with hope. This would be a poignant book to support discussion of bereavement with older children.
-- BookTrust
Quietly contemplative, mingling hope and healing, this is a book that will offer comfort to many.
-- Kirkus Reviews, starred review
In this touching story about grief, Bear mourns the death of his friend Bird, working his way from
being paralyzed by sadness to reengaging with the world.
-- Booklist