The boy on the beach /
Material type: TextPublication details: Bloomsbury Publishing Ltd, London 2005ISBN: 0747546843Subject(s): Beaches | African American children | Seashore | Children's stories, AfrikaansSummary: Reluctant to let the surf crash over him, Joe runs down the beach and has an adventure with an old boat. With dancing sunlit watercolor pictures and joyful words, Daly expresses the physicalness of a small child's fun in the sand and waves. There's a very simple story: after playing on the beach, Joe wanders away and gets lost behind a sand dune. A friendly blond lifeguard, "as cool as a coke," finds Joe and carries the kid piggyback to smiling Mom and Dad, who buy him a king-size ice-cream cone. The boy and his family are black and middle-class; that they feel at home with the whites on the beach is taken for granted. Children will see a relaxed multiracial scene. Older readers who know that this is the new South Africa will be moved by the pictures of easy integration, where just a few years ago this child would have been forbidden entry by the apartheid law. The playful story is set against the beauty of the Cape sea and sky and mountain.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Main Library Picture Books (E) | E D153b 2005 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 01028 |
Browsing Main Library shelves, Shelving location: Picture Books (E) Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
E C518a 2019 A is for awesome 23 iconic women who changed the world / | E C653t 2002 There was an old lady who swallowed a bat! / | E C848f 2018 Lift and look flowers and plants / | E D153b 2005 The boy on the beach / | E F791t 1997 Time for bed / | E H513c 1991 Chrysanthemum / | E H844f 2013 Friends / |
Reluctant to let the surf crash over him, Joe runs down the beach and has an adventure with an old boat. With dancing sunlit watercolor pictures and joyful words, Daly expresses the physicalness of a small child's fun in the sand and waves. There's a very simple story: after playing on the beach, Joe wanders away and gets lost behind a sand dune. A friendly blond lifeguard, "as cool as a coke," finds Joe and carries the kid piggyback to smiling Mom and Dad, who buy him a king-size ice-cream cone. The boy and his family are black and middle-class; that they feel at home with the whites on the beach is taken for granted. Children will see a relaxed multiracial scene. Older readers who know that this is the new South Africa will be moved by the pictures of easy integration, where just a few years ago this child would have been forbidden entry by the apartheid law. The playful story is set against the beauty of the Cape sea and sky and mountain.