MENU
Home
Giveaways
Competitions
Reading Group
Open Forum
Write Away Conferences
Book Guides (61)
In Focus (19)
Interviews (103)
Reviews
   a. 0 + years (197)
   b. 3 + years (493)
   c. 6 + years
   d. 9 + years (967)
   e. 12 + years (746)
   f. 14 + years (290)
   g, 16+ years (35)
   h. Audio Books (48)
   i. Prizewinners (44)
   j. Adults (3)
   k. Professional (57)
   l. DVD (2)
   m. Films (1)
   n. Theatre (1)
Story Starters (20)
About Us
Advanced Search
REGISTER and LOGIN
ALREADY REGISTERED?Login here.

Have you Forgotten Your Password?
WHO'S ONLINE?
We have 4 guests and 1 member online
LAST UPDATE
Website last updated: 2008-11-17 21:03:19
The Faraway Island

When a sailor decides he can’t bear life on ship anymore, he jumps overboard and swims to a big barren rock, just to be on his own. Before long some passing sailors notice that the rock is changing; rice and vegetables are growing, and they wonder who is tending the earth. The question is will the lonely sailor welcome their friendship?

This beautifully illustrated story is set in the sixteenth century against the backdrop of the voyages of discovery. The protagonist and nameless sailor, embittered by a lengthy time at sea, has become in his own words ‘a monster’. So, deciding he can’t bear to be around others anymore, he jumps overboard and swims to a big barren rock, in order to be on his own. Once there, he comes across some rice and a cockerel and before long he’s growing fruit and vegetables, tending the rock and as a result drawing unwanted attention on himself. Visiting sailors bring plants and eventually he is summoned to meet the Portuguese Queen, which he does somewhat reluctantly. And there begins the start of his recovery.

The Faraway Island is essentially a tale of the melting and mending of a heart. Our hardened sailor has given up on himself and needs to learn to trust others and see value in himself. By the end of the book our faith is duly restored in humanity and our ability to heal. Perseverance, forgiveness and belief are common themes in traditional and folk tales and that is not where the similarities with this book end. The text has a lyrical quality and would make a good oral story.

A clue may come in the story’s origin, for historians among you will be interested to know the picturebook is based upon the true story of Fernando Lopez and the island of St Helena, although some of the grittier detail is avoided. The final pages provide some historical background that may be of use to teachers wishing to share this book as part of a study of the period. Otherwise, besides the written text, please enjoy the book for its gentle illustrations that beautifully capture a different time.

Buy this Book

2008-08-03

Write Review Recommend Print



You need to login first before you can write any reviews

Back to Listing

LATEST PICKS

Bambert's Book of Missing Stories


CALENDAR
Sat, Nov 15th, @8:00am- 05:00PM
2008 IBBY/NCRCL Conference
Tue, Nov 18th, @8:00am- 05:00PM
Booktrust Teenage Prize
Tue, Nov 18th, @8:00am- 05:00PM
Royal Mail Awards
Fri, Nov 28th, @8:00am- 05:00PM
Costa Shortlist Announcement
SERENDIPITY
Katie and the Mona Lisa

Katie and the Mona Lisa