A wordless, visually compelling look at our changing environment, featured on
a government reading list for schools. A mother and baby look through a window
at a view of wilderness and sky as far as the eye can see. With each page, the
boy grows and the scene changes. At first, in a clear patch of forest, a single
house appears. A few years pass and there is a village in the distance. By the
time the boy is twenty, the village has developed into a city. The young man
gets married, has a child of his own and moves to the country, where father and
child look through the window of their new home at the undeveloped wilderness
outside. Illustrated with elaborate and gorgeous collage constructions, Window
is a wordless picture book that speaks volumes.
Available in Big Book Format
Review
‘A book which can be ‘read’ again and again.’ The Guardian; ‘Each child will
see something different – that’s the joy of the story.’ Books for Keeps
Publishers Weekly
The creator of Where the Forest Meets the Sea offers another warning about the
environment–somewhat didactically–in this wordless picture book. Each spread
features the window of Sam’s room, from which the reader can see the landscape
being destroyed as Sam grows up–forest and animals are replaced by neighbors
and houses, factories are built, graffiti is scribbled on walls and other
problems indigenous to populous cities appear. At the end of the book Sam holds
up his baby to a new window where the tree-filled landscape contains an ominous
sign advertising a new subdivision. “By the year 2020,’ Baker says in a
concluding note, “no wilderness will remain on our planet, outside that
protected in national parks and reserves.’ Her distinctive collages are
extraordinary in their complexity, but children will need an adult to explain
how, “by understanding and changing the way we personally affect the
environment, we can make a difference.’ All ages. (Apr.)
School Library Journal
Gr 1 Up– A mother, holding her newborn son, gazes out the window of his room
at lush vegetation, tropical birds, a pond, a kangaroo. Ten double-page
illustrations following show the development–during a 20-year period–of the
area outside the window. As Sam (the baby) grows older, the land is cleared, a
road is built, then a farm. A housing development goes up, then takes over a
hill that was once green with lush growth. Development becomes suburb, then
city, complete with billboards, high-rises, noise pollution, litter, and
overpopulation. Sam marries and moves to a new house in the country, where the
final window scene shows him, holding his baby, staring at a sign announcing,
“House Blocks For Sale’. Words are unnecessary, as Baker’s carefully rendered
collage scenes explicitly detail the situation. Varying symbolic objects on
Sam’s windowsill (and the cracking and peeling of paint on the wall) add to the
book’s message. Baker’s meticulous collages, formed from natural materials,
clay, fabric, and real hair, are so detailed that they require many viewings. A
final, short author’s note explains the inspiration for the book: “. . .by
understanding and changing the way we personally affect the environment, we can
make a difference.’ This unusual, exceptionally well-crafted picture book might
be a good way to begin. –Susan Scheps, Shaker Heights Public Library, OH”