by Thea Lu (Author)
A thoughtful book that will resonate with travelers, homebodies, and anyone who's ever longed for an old friend or a new journey.
Dan is the owner of a café, living in a small town on the coast. Aki is a sailor on the sea, traveling from place to place. Dan loves his familiar views and enjoys welcoming visitors from far away. Aki loves the wonders he sees abroad and enjoys meeting new people in distant lands. Though Dan likes his life, and Aki likes his life, they each feel so alone sometimes. But every once in a while, separate lives can collide and make the world feel large and small all at once.
Following the parallel stories of Dan and Aki, Here and There introduces readers to two contrasting yet connected characters. Thea Lu's evocative text and art will spark lasting conversations about home, travel, and the similarities between very different people.
Bologna Children's Book Fair Illustrators Exhibition (2024)
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In this picture book debut, Lu observes two adults living very different lives. Dan, a pale-skinned, mustache-sporting man shown sitting at a long wooden table, owns a café in a small seaside town. His life is "like a big oak tree, rooted in his town and never moving." Aki, who wears a neatly trimmed black beard, is a sailor. He stands at the prow of a boat, gazing out, and lives "like a nomadic gull, always on the wing and never settling down." Drawing Dan's world in earth tones and Aki's in oceanic blues, close-textured illustrations delineate the parts of human experience that each one is missing out on. Customers from the "far east" and the "far north" tell Dan about distant places he's never been, while Aki occasionally glimpses, as a guest, feelings of camaraderie and family: "Children gathered to hear his stories about the sea." Quiet colors and loose, expressive figures produce artwork that's rich in feeling, with many tiny details--a woodstove drying wet socks, the keepsakes each man treasures--captured at close range. At the story's end, Dan and Aki meet at a warm gathering, and their worlds become one, for a spread at least, in this deeply felt story about reality and longing. Ages 5-9. (Apr.)
Copyright 2024 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.