A heartstoppingly beautiful wordless picture book about migration and empathy.The migrants must leave the forest. Borders are crossed, sacrifices made, loved ones are lost. It takes such courage to reach the end. At last the journey is over and the migrants arrive. This is the new place.Through extraordinarily powerful images, Migrants narrates the journey of a group of animals that leaves behind a leafless ...Full description
A heartstoppingly beautiful wordless picture book about migration and empathy.The migrants must leave the forest. Borders are crossed, sacrifices made, loved ones are lost. It takes such courage to reach the end. At last the journey is over and the migrants arrive. This is the new place.Through extraordinarily powerful images, Migrants narrates the journey of a group of animals that leaves behind a leafless forest. With forceful simplicity, Migrants shows us the courage, loss and underlying hope migration takes. And that arriving in a new land may mean burying a portion of the past.Children will empathize quickly with the elegantly illustrated animal characters, each of whom have their own identity with details like clothing, color choices and expressions. The dark pages add weight to the silence of their journey and the individual animals help make the story a universal one. A perfect book to help teach children about refugees and migration, with humanity, inclusivity and empathy.Readers canโt fail to be moved by this deeply emotional and thought-provoking tale.โA raw, startling portrait of migration.โโKirkus Reviews, StarredIssa Watanabe was born in Peru in 1980. She has led and developed several projects to promote social integration through art, published a number of books and was selected for the Illustrators Exhibition at the Bologna Book Fair 2018.Praise for MigrantsโItโs a rare feat: a wordless picture book in which the absence of text intensifies the stories it tells. With its stark dearth of color, seen only where necessary, and evocative imagery, the artistโs pictures make the migrantโs journey โ distinct yet everyday โ feel palpable. A raw, startling portrait of migration.โโKirkus Reviews, StarredโWatanabe captures with grace both dignity and determination, and the brilliance of her artโs hues against a velvety black backdrop gives the somber spreads great visual power.โโPublisherโs WeeklyโRather than protecting children from difficult themes, she uses animals to wordlessly convey the hurt and sacrifice but ultimately underlying hope of such forced journeys.โโThe Listener, 50 Best Kidsโ Books of 2020โI donโt think I can come up with enough superlatives for Watanabeโs superb illustrations. She captures a range of emotions in the faces of the anthropomorphic animals.โโThe Pirate Tree Blog