Author & Illustrators
This spellbinding picturebook captures the power behind the simplest of all acts – a smile. When a baby smiles at her brother, the joy he feels is so powerful that it sets in motion a chain of kindness that spreads through the community and around the world. Journey through the illustrated pages and witness the magic behind each and every smile, seeing how far a smile can go and the impact it can have.
This beautiful picture book encourages children to reflect on their own smiles, who makes them smile and how they make others smile. It leaves children wondering ‘Where will your smile go?’.
This book’s attractive, full-page illustrations immerse readers in a magical and diverse world of happiness and possibility. It is incredibly hard not to smile when reading this book! This book is likely to help to bring back smiles for children whose smiles may have gone away. The book would work well as a whole class read but I also believe it could be used one-to-one with a child who may need a little support with their emotional well-being or assembly on how the smallest of actions can impact whole communities.
In this inspired adaptation of the Red Riding Hood tale, Marie Voigt has made good use of the familiar structure, but Red journeys to Grandma’s house not through the woods but through the city. This imaginative twist allows Marie Voigt to explore what are the most dangerous threats in modern society, now that wolves no longer prowl the country.
When Red finally makes it to the safety of Grandma’s house, Grandma confesses that she was swallowed by the city too – once. The book ends optimistically with their joint plans to do the wonderful things that are possible in cities. The constrained red and monochrome palette adds to the impact and subtlety of the illustrations and storytelling.
The KS2 children I read this with began by enthusiastically spotting the traces of wolf and making comparisons with the original. This was fun, and useful for them as storytellers. Then, as the story progressed, the discussion deepened, quite naturally, into one of those rare and precious conversations about big issues and modern day problems.
This book is not just charming and entertaining but important too. It would make the perfect introduction to the importance of healthy eating, the dangers of fake and sensationalised news or the pitfalls of a consumer society. My group had covered all three by the end of our 45 minute reading session.
This gem of a book could be used with every class in a primary school to broaden responses to traditional tales, to stimulate writing, or to open rich discussion of difficult issues. My group declared it should win a prize. I say buy it and try it!
review
Year group(s) the book is most suitable for:
Year group(s) the book is most suitable for:
Does the book contain anything that teachers would wish to know about before recommending in class (strong language, sensitive topics etc.)?
Does the book contain anything that teachers would wish to know about before recommending in class (strong language, sensitive topics etc.)?
Would you recommend the book for use in primary schools?
yes
Curriculum links (if relevant)
Curriculum links (if relevant)
Any other comments
Any other comments