Freedom Day is what everyone in Sydney is calling the 11th October because it means strict lockdown is over and you can now do more. For many people this seems to mean 'shop' with queues outside shops such as Kmart. Shopping is not something I'll be rushing off to do. It does mean most of my students will be back at school from the start of next week so my life will change.
When I think of 'freedom', I am much more likely to think of walls, barriers and metaphorical means of corralment. That got me thinking about how many picture books feature 'walls' and how I hadn't done a post or a book display at school about walls, and there are certainly many books without even collecting the ones about the Berlin Wall or the Great Wall of China.
I do not have this one, but would really like to see it based on its blurbWalls of all sorts: social walls, border walls, political walls, emotional walls, big walls, old walls, and small walls. Speaking to today's critical political issues, this playful and encouraging story about breaking down barriers helps children learn about inclusivity, equality, openness, and kindness while also reminding grown-ups of the same values. Walls is a timely and timeless story, told with bold and colourful illustrations.
I like to read Sheep, Goat and the Creaking Gate by Claire Saxby to my preschool classes because it allows for great discussion about the gate and the grass being greener on the other side of the fence and what can be done about it.
Some that I like and that are in the library are:
A great place to start is the timeless fable about unity and breaking down barriers,
• Tillie and the Wall by Leo Lionni and
• Little Mouse and the Red Wall by Britta Teckentrupabout facing fears, discovering hope and coping with change.
Then
• Suri's Wall by Lucy Estela and Matt Ottley
• The Wall in the Middle of the Book by Jon Agee
• Sometimes a Wall by Dianne White and Barroux• The Chickens Build a Wall by Jean- Francois Dumont
• What is a Wall After All? by Judy Allen and Alan Baron
• The Wall: A Timeless Tale by Giancarlo Macri
• Through the Wall by Jonathan Standing (graphic novel)
• Beyond the Fence by Maria Gulemetova
• Go Away War! by Elzbieta
Next specific walls
• The Soccer Fence by Phil Bildner (what apartheid meant for children in South Africa)
• Hey, Wall by Susan verde and John Parra ( the wall being a place for a community art project)
• Banksy Graffited Walls and Wasn't Sorry by Fausto Gilberti (an artist who spray paints on walls while noone is watching)
Two books about the Vietnamese Veteran's Wall
• The Wall by Eve Bunting and Ronald Himler; and
• Maya Lin: Artist- Architect of Light and Lines by Jeanne Walker Harvey and Dow Phumiruk
The Great Wall of China
• The Seven Chinese Brothers by Margaret Mary and Jean Tseng
• Ming's Adventure on the Great Wall of China by Li Jian and Yijin Wert
• The Emperor Who Built the Great Wall by Jillian Lin and Shi Meng
The Berlin Wall
• The Wall;Growing Up Behind the Iron Curtain by Peter Sis
Inspired by your post I have started a Pinterest collection of books which feature walls. Thank you for this interesting way to think about the 'end of lockdown' in our city.
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