There is great care that goes into the chosen illustrations.
These drawings are the entire story and must have the right emotional weight
and pacing for the reader to understand what’s happening. The spot illustration
pages with several cells on them carry most of the movement. They are
beautifully drawn and paced wonderfully. It did take me two readings to
understand the demon shadows as the embodiment of war.
One of my favorite pages is the one covered in cells of just
cloud drawings to show the passage of several days. Through just the
illustrations the reader knows that our main character and his family was
driven from their home unwillingly and he must set out to a “new world.” This
new place has so many foreign and strange things in it for the protagonist. The
language barrier is shown in a simple and relatable way. He meets others who
are dealing with the same hardships and must find work to bring their family
over for a shot at a better life. He slowly makes friends in the city.
I just really love how Shaun Tan depicts war as these scary
robotic looking beings or as a faceless scaly demon. Also how strange everything
is in the other country they have fled to. It makes sense that someone would be
uncomfortable or confused in a completely different society, and he pulls this
off by making it look like its own unique architecture and agriculture that
doesn’t exist here. Using fantasy elements, Tan makes his story remarkably
realistic.
The story is monochromatic, but there are slight color tones
that differentiate the moods. A cool, dark gray tone is used to show sad
memories or war scenes and a yellow or more sepia color is presented in the
hopeful scenes.
The passage of time is again shown beautifully through the
sprouting and death of what we can recognize as a flower. He is finally
reunited with his family and must help them adjust to this bizarre environment.
The family photo was a large motivator for the protagonist
during the story and is shown on another spot page that resembles the one shown
at the beginning of the story. This symbolizing his official new home now that
his family has arrived. The ending illustrations portray his daughter helping
out someone who has just come to this new place as well.
Words are completely unnecessary for this story. The
feelings of the characters are expressed through the drawings better than what
words could do.
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