Friday, July 25, 2025

독서칼럼


[염혜원의 이책저책] 302호의 생일, 기억나요?관리자2025-07-25




302호의 생일, 기억나요?

글_염혜원(그림책 작가) 
 
 


“‘욕조 없는 새 집, 낯설기만 한 새 동네.
하지만 함께하는 가족이 있다면
그곳은 금세 보금자리가 된다.
다양한 가족의 모습을 따스히 비추는 두 그림책.”


 



『302호의 생일』, 레베카 스테드 저, 염혜원 역, 그레이시 장 그림/만화, 위즈덤하우스, 2025『기억나요?』, 시드니 스미스 저, 김지은 역, 책읽는곰, 2024





 
어릴 때 우리 집은 늘 이사를 다녔다. 이사 갈 때마다 새집은 다 제각각이었다. 어떤 집은 산꼭대기 에 어떤 집은 새로 지어진 아파트였다. 어떤 집은 화장실에 욕조가 없었고 어떤 집엔 커다란 벚나무가 있었다. 서울의 가장자리를 동서남북으로 종횡하며, 몇 년에 한 번씩 이사하는데도 나는 그게 싫지 않았다. 어디를 가든 엄마와 아빠, 그리고 언니와 동생이 있었다.

『302호의 생일』에서 아이는 아빠와 새 집에 이사를 왔다. 아이는 이전 동네의 작은 미끄럼틀이나, 이 전 집의 크고 파란 욕조, 옷장 안에 냄새 같은 것이 그립다. 하지만 아빠는 새 아파트의 생일을 축하하기 위해 생일 케이크를 마련하기도 하고, 멋진 무지개를 방에 그려주고, 기차도 되어주며, 팬케이크와 프렌치 토스트도 척척 만들어준다. 새 집에 이사 갔지만 아이에게는 아빠가 있다. 낯선 곳을 가장 좋아하는 곳으로 만들어주는 아빠. 

 『기억나요?』의 주인공은 엄마와 아들이다. 이들은 아빠와 함께 살던 집을 떠나 도시의 작은 아파트로 이사를 간다. 그들에게는 아빠와 함께했던 좋은 기억들이 많다. 소풍을 갔었고 자전거를 배웠다. 그러나 이젠 아빠와 헤어져 먼 곳의 새 아파트에서, 새로운 기억을 만들 때다. 엄마와 단둘이서. 새 집에서 새벽에 눈을 뜬 아이는 새로운 기억을, 추억을 만들 준비가 되었다.

 『302호의 생일』에서 검은 볼펜으로 그려진 아이의 불 꺼진 방은 아이의 불안한 마음을 보여주는 것 만 같다. 그러다가, 책장을 넘겨 아빠가 아이를 업고 나오는 불 켜진 거실은 아빠의 등만큼이나 따뜻한 노란색이다. 그림을 그린 그레이시 장은 이 책에서는 이전의 책들과는 다른 미디엄을 선택했다. 볼펜 드로잉과 몇 가지 원색의 물감만으로 커다란 판형에 쓱쓱 그려진 그림들은 단순한 선과 최소한의 색깔로도 많은 것을 보여준다. 

시드니 스미스의 책 『기억나요?』에서는 엄마와 아이가 누워있는 장면과 추억의 장면들이 교차한다. 아이와 엄마는 침대에 누워서 서로의 기억을 번갈아 떠올린다. 어두운 방에서 아름다웠던 기억들을 떠올리다가 서서히 날이 밝아온다. 천천히 이삿짐이 쌓여있는 방안에 아침 햇살이 들고 엄마와 아들 단 둘뿐이지만 그들은 걱정되거나 무섭지 않다. 서로가 함께해서일 것이다. 두 책 모두 희망 가득 찬 마법 같은 아침이 밝아오며 책장을 덮게 된다. 

이 책들은 이사 가는 날에 대한 책이어서 닮아 있기도 하지만 나의 눈길을 끈 것은 두 책 모두 한부모가정의 이야기라는 점이었다. 오랫동안 나는 엄마, 아빠, 아이들, 거기에 고양이나 강아지까지 더해지는 어떤 이상적인 가족의 모습을 머릿속에 가지고 있었다. “가족을 그리세요” 하면 생각나는 머리가 긴 예쁜 엄마와 키 큰 아빠, 귀여운 아이들…그러나 우리 삶에서 가족의 모습은 너무나 다양하고, 또한 그 모습이 급격하게 바뀌어 가고 있다. 또 그 모습들이 다 제각각이고 다를지라도 그 가족이 불행하다거나 불완전하다고 말할 수는 없는 일일 것이다. 오래된 전래동화에 나오는 것처럼 모든 새엄마는 무조건 아이들을 구박하고, 모든 아버지는 집안일엔 무심하기만 한 것은 아니다. 가정의 모습은 하나의 전형이 아니라 다양하고, 가정의 행복이 가정의 형태에 따라 결정되는 것은 아니라는 것을 나는 아주 뒤늦게 깨달았다. 그래서 그림책 작가로 그러한 다양한 가족의 모습을 그림책에서 보여준다는 것이 중요한 일이라는 생각을 하며 작업을 해오고 있다. 그래서 조용히 한부모가정의 이야기를 그려낸 이 두 책이 반갑다. 

글 작가인 레베카 스테드는 어린 시절 아빠와 보낸 반절의 시간의 경험을 바탕으로 『302호의 생일』을  오랜 시간을 들여 구상하고 써냈다고 한다. 『기억나요?』의 작가 시드니 스미스 또한 어린 시절 부모의 이혼을 겪고 그 기억을 그림책으로 풀어냈다고 들었다. 그러나 두 그림책 모두 한부모만 있다는 것이 결핍으로 느껴지지는 않는다. 아빠와 딸은 함께 동네를 산책하고, 짐을 풀고, 새로 가장 좋아하는 아침 식사 메뉴를 만들었다. 엄마와 아들은 이삿짐을 싸서, 트럭에 싣고, 아주 먼 곳까지 고속도로를 운전해서 이사를 하는 새로운 기억을 만들었다. 새로 시작하는 그들에겐 과거의 추억도 아름답지만 새로 만들어 나가야 할 아름다운 기억이 있는 것이다. 

새 집은 커다란 푸른 욕조도 없고, 낯선 도시의 작은 아파트일 수도 있다. 새 동네는 너무 높은 미끄럼틀이 있고 아침엔 버스가 지나가는 소리가 들리는 시끄러운 곳일 수도 있다. 그러나 그곳에도 가족이 함께한다. 그 가족은 그들의 벽이고 지붕이고, 단단한 바닥이고 커다란 창문이 되어줄 

Sunday, July 20, 2025

Kirkus Review-A Spoonful of the Sea

 Review Issue Date: August 15, 2025

Online Publish Date: July 19, 2025
Publisher:Norton Young Readers
Pages: 32
Price ( Hardcover ): $18.99
Publication Date: September 9, 2025
ISBN ( Hardcover ): 9781324053699
Section: Children's

A young Korean girl overcomes her initial resistance to a longstanding birthday custom.

An unnamed child sits at the table, clearly disappointed by her mother’s offering of miyeok-guk, or seaweed soup. It’s “not the strawberry cake, not the chocolate cupcakes I want,” she pouts. But Mom explains that eating miyeok-guk is a tradition that goes back generations. “I had it every day for a month after you were born,” Mom notes. Grandmother prepared it for her as she recovered from childbirth—as did her mother, and the child’s great-great-grandma, who was a haenyeo, or freediver. Yum deftly sheds light on the legacy of freediving; women often brought their daughters along on dives and even dove while pregnant. A haenyeo who observed a whale eating seaweed after giving birth inspired the tradition of the soup. Now fully appreciating its significance, the girl savors her soup, much to the delight of her mother. Her bowl transforms into a seascape filled with women divers as she observes, “My birthday soup is miyeok-guk. It smells like grandma’s town. It tastes like my birthday.” Visible pencil marks and soft splashes of color give Yum’s illustrations a tender intimacy and a coziness befitting her gently told tribute to the ties that bind. An author’s note offers more information on the women who have dived for octopuses, seaweed, shellfish, and more for hundreds of years near Korea’s Jeju Island.

A tale of familial warmth and strength, steeped in generations of tradition. (Picture book. 5-8)

Sunday, May 18, 2025

SLJ review-TOTO

 Yum, Hyewon. Toto. illus. by Hyewon Yum. 40p. Holiday House/Neal Porter. Jan. 2025. Tr $18.99. ISBN 9780823453894.

Gr 2-4–Readers don’t learn the name of the main character; Toto is actually the name of the pink birthmark above her right eye. Her family raises her to be proud of her birthmark, but some people make her feel self-conscious. When she starts school, her mother cuts her hair to hide Toto; however, she is embarrassed when her hair sweeps up and her new friend sees it. Sweetly, her new friend loves it, and the main character decides not to hide Toto anymore. The text is complex, comprised of the narrator’s internal thoughts, her questions to herself, and dialogue with her new friend. Most pages include multiple sentences, and some extend to a second page. Yum’s pleasing colored pencil and watercolor style is present here, and her talent for minimalistic expression shines through the limited color palette. The color scheme echoes Juana Martinez-Neal’s Alma and How She Got Her Name, with most of the art in shades of grays and light browns. The only bright color is pink: Toto is pink, and the narrator’s face flushes pink when she is embarrassed, nervous, and scared. The text also tells readers the importance of this color in indicating the character’s mood. Back matter includes an author’s note. VERDICT A unique addition to any collection. –Chance Lee Joyner

Wednesday, February 5, 2025

Shelf Awareness Review / TOTO

 

Toto

by Hyewon Yum

Hyewon Yum specializes in illustrating uplifting picture books centered on brave young girls who discover their strength--in a big swimming pool (Saturday Is Swimming Day), within their small bodies (Not Little), and so on. In that triumphant vein, Yum has written Toto, in which a little girl comes to terms with a prominent birthmark that preoccupies her without defining her.

"Sometimes I wonder," begins the girl, who goes unnamed, "how I would look without Toto," as she calls the bubble-gum-pink birthmark on her forehead. She has never really minded the mark--her cousin Charlie thinks it means she has a superpower--but she's nervous about it in the run-up to the first day of school because "sometimes people only see Toto, not me." Her mother gives her a hairstyle that largely hides Toto, and at school the girl immediately finds a bosom buddy who has no idea of Toto's existence... until the girl hangs upside down from the monkey bars, gravity tugs at her bangs, and her secret is revealed. Now what?

Yum's watercolor-and-pencil art is invitingly roomy and subdued: it's all browns and grays except for the girl's birthmark and the occasional burst of pale pink--the color of her face, say, when she's embarrassed by Toto. And sharp-eyed readers will note that Toto is on proud, pink view in photos of the girl scattered around her home. Toto is an it's-okay-to-be-different book that leaves room for realistically mixed feelings about standing apart. --Nell Beram, freelance writer and YA author

Discover: This it's-okay-to-be-different picture book, centered on a little girl with a prominent birthmark on her forehead, leaves room for realistically mixed feelings about standing apart.

Wednesday, May 8, 2024

SLJ review- Not Perfect

 MYERS, Maya. Not Perfect. illus. by Hyewon Yum. 40p. Holiday House/Neal Porter. Apr. 2024. Tr $18.99. ISBN 9780823451708.

PreS-Gr 2–Dot excels in many areas, yet perfection always seems just out of reach. She lives in the shadow of her seemingly flawless family members, even their pet cat. Despite her efforts to bake cupcakes, play soccer, and master the piano, she falls short of perfection in each endeavor. When tasked with creating a poster of someone she admires, Dot faces frustration as her attempts fall flat. After tearing up her failures and taking a breather, she finds inspiration in the colorful paper shreds. In a stroke of creativity, she crafts a mosaic of her best friend. In class, her friend unveils an imperfect drawing of Dot, leading them to embrace the imperfections in their friendship. The endearing colored pencil illustrations complement this heartwarming tale, teaching children the value of perseverance and self-acceptance. VERDICT An sweet narrative promoting resilience and embracing imperfection, this is an amiable addition to the shelves.–Kirsten Caldwell

Monday, April 1, 2024

HornBook review-Not perfect

 Not Perfect

by Maya Myers; illus. by Hyewon Yum

Preschool Porter/Holiday 40 pp.

4/24 9780823451708 $18.99

e-book ed. 9780823457472 $11.99

Not Little (rev. 9/21) protagonist Dot is not happy about not being perfect. While her multiracial family members excel

at their endeavors (sister is an artist, twin brothers are spelling bee champs, Mom has a black belt, Dad sings in a band,

and: “Even my cat is perfect”), Dot bakes lopsided cupcakes, kicks too-wide goals, and plays wrong notes on the piano.

At school, her best friend, Sam, shines in tidiness and rule-following, and Dot chooses him for her “person we admire”

project. Frustration grows and self-esteem plummets as her portrait of Sam doesn’t match what’s in her head. She rips

up her drawing, storms outside, angry-jumps on a trampoline, then dries her tears, gets back to work—and arrives at a

perfectly imperfect solution. is second book about Dot gives the realistic-seeming child plenty of support from

nonjudgmental adults, providing time and space to solve her own problems—and without the pressure of perfection.

Spare colored-pencil illustrations with lots of white space are particularly good at reflecting Dot’s feelings, from eager

and hopeful to self-conscious, mad, and sad, to relaxed, contented, and proud. “‘I made a lot of mistakes. It was really

hard.’ ‘But you did it,’ [Sam] says. ‘at’s true.’ I did a little bounce of happiness. ‘I did.’” ELISSA GERSHOWITZ

Thursday, February 15, 2024

WSJ

 Hyewon Yum’s illustrations bring vibrancy to “Night Song,” a picture book for children ages 4-8 written with gentle humor by Mk Smith Depres. Our hero is Bernardo, a frog who loves the sound of early-morning birdsong and has a slightly confused idea of its role in how each day unfurls: “With the help of the songbirds, the sun did its work,” we read. “It gently unfolded the flowers, dried the night-damp stones, and leaned upon the backs of leaves to dance across the forest floor.”

Bernardo wishes that he too could “make the whole woods happy,” and so, in obedience to a storytelling pattern that is perhaps too common, he tries to act like something he is not, in this case pretending to be bird- and sun-like. His efforts are doomed, of course. Only when Bernardo accepts that he has value as he is—as a chorister of froggy “night song”—does he find contentment. The conceit may be overly familiar, but with its inventive text and appealing pictures, this is a special book nonetheless.

Tuesday, October 24, 2023

review from PW

 Night Song

Mk Smith Despres, illus. by Hyewon Yum.


In this lyrically told be-yourself story, a

frog named Bernardo longs to join the

birds whose dawn song inspires the sun,

which in turn "gently unfolded the flowers,

dried the night-damp stones, and leaned

across the backs of the leaves to dance across

the forest floor." The pleasure that other

creatures take in this beauty ("The fishes

in the pond swam in the song, the drag-

onflies hummed along") spur Bernardo's

desire to sing like the birds. "I'd like to do

that.... I'd like to make the whole woods

happy,

happy," he thinks. But attempts to

become more avian-adorning himself in

colorful leaves, ascending a tree--are met

with stern looks. The frog's perspective

doesn't shift until a small friend reminds

Bernardo of the role he plays in another

musical drama: the dusk song that puts

the woods to sleep. Assured lines by

debut creator Smith Despres convey the

wonder of change brought by the day':

rhythms, while limpid colored pencil,

watercolor, and ink spreads by Yum (Luli

and the Language of Tea) deliver giggles and

render subtly changing light and color in

this hymn to contemplating one's 

Review from Kirkus

 


NIGHT SONG  
Author: Mk Smith Despres
Illustrator: Hyewon Yum

Review Issue Date: November 15, 2023
Online Publish Date: October 21, 2023
Publisher:Enchanted Lion Books
Pages: 52
Price ( Hardcover ): $18.95
Publication Date: January 9, 2024
ISBN ( Hardcover ): 9781592703944
Section: Children's

Despite great effort, Bernardo the frog just can’t find a place in the morning chorus.

Bernardo knows his song sounds “like wood and nighttime and things inside of other things.” But he loves the way the birds sing to the sun to unfold the flowers and send leaves “to dance across the forest floor.” He finds it so lovely that he tries to join in by donning a silly bird disguise made of leaves and berries. Alas, he looks ridiculous to the creatures around the pond; nor do they appreciate his efforts to climb a tree and then dance awkwardly across flower tops. By the time he gives up, the sun has traveled across the sky, and he feels too discouraged to listen to the crickets, the blackbirds, and the other frogs in their evening chorus—until, that is, he hears a snail marvel at “the song that lulls the woods to sleep.” Using a mix of watercolor, colored pencil, and ink, Yum illustrates Despres’ lilting, sonorous text with idyllic scenes of songbirds and waterfowl, butterflies and dragonflies, amid verdant tufts of greenery and sprays of flowers. As the day passes and the tonal palette dims subtly from bright day to a cool blue star-flecked night, one last view leaves the small frog with eyes closed in blissful appreciation.

Poetic and peaceful: a natural for bedtime reading. (Picture book. 4-6)

Friday, August 11, 2023

review from Shelf Awareness

  

SOMETIMES I KAPLOOM by Rachel Vail, illus. by Hyewon Yum (Orchard Books; August 1, 2023) was reviewed in the August 11, 2023 edition ofShelf Awareness.

 

Please see below and attached for the full review.

 

Sometimes I Kaploom

by Rachel Vail, illus. by Hyewon Yum

image001.gif

Prolific author Rachel Vail published Sometimes I'm Bombaloo in 2002, starring charmingly articulate Katie Honors. It became the first book in her Big Feelings series, with the publication of companion picture book Sometimes I Grumblesquinch following in 2022. Vail auspiciously partners again with her Grumblesquinch collaborator, Hyewon Yum, for Sometimes I Kaploom, a delightful reminder that being courageous doesn't mean you're not afraid.

Self-aware Katie knows she's "a really brave kid": she has a superhero stance, can climb high, risks small bites of "good for me food," and goes to bed "without even calling to be checked on" (more than twice). At school, however, she sometimes kaplooms. Saying "bye, I love you. See you soon" to her mother isn't always possible: "The roar inside me is so huge I have to open my mouth and let it out." Katie realizes, as she calms in her mother's lap, that she can be "brave and KAPLOOMING" at the same time. "So brave," her mother agrees, "especially while you KAPLOOM."

Yum's vibrant colored-pencil illustrations notably enhance Vail's encouraging, empowering narrative. Yum ingeniously turns Katie's t-shirt into a visual metaphor for Katie's feelings. The star on her shirt is an emotional barometer: its bright outlines disappear when Katie confronts "tingly smelling" breakfast, the star droops at the prospect of parental separation, becomes electrified as she kaplooms, and gains a rainbow trail as she recovers back to her superhero self. Vail ensures big feelings are thoroughly acknowledged; Yum's art assures Vail's words get empathically recognized. --Terry Hong, BookDragon

Orchard Books, $18.99, hardcover, 40p., 9781338840308

 

Monday, July 10, 2023

Star review from Booklist

 image.png SOMETIMES I KAPLOOM by Rachel Vail; Illus. by Hyewon Yum 

Aug. 2023. 40p. Scholastic/Orchard, $18.99 (9781338840308). PreS–Gr. 1 

 

Vail and Yum have here created a helpful book for parents and children dealing with separation anxiety. Climbing high on playground equipment, making an effort to eat new foods, and going to bed with only one nightlight and “without even calling to be checked on. Except once . . . maybe twice” are a few of the feats Katie performs as she practices being brave. When her mother prepares to leave her at preschool one morning, the girl’s attempts at bravery fail completely and she goes “KAPLOOM.” A fierce, full-blown tantrum takes over as Katie loses control, screaming, pulling at her hair, and hanging onto her mother. The girl dislikes feeling and behaving in this manner, but her emotions are difficult to control. Colored-pencil illustrations on white backgrounds clearly show Katie’s emotions when she is brave and when she is kaplooming. Her anguish and frustration are clearly conveyed with wide-open mouths, clenched fists, tightly shut eyes, and red faces, along with lightning bolts shooting from her body. The youngster’s anger and sadness slowly dissipate after her mother gently reassures her—“I’ll come back. I always come back.”—and explains it is possible to be “brave and sad” and “brave and scared” at the same time. Notes from the author and illustrator explain their experiences with their own children’s separation anxiety. — Maryann Owen

Kirkus

 SOMETIMES I KAPLOOM

SOMETIMES I KAPLOOM

Comfort for both children and parents in an all-too-familiar situation.

It’s hard to stay brave when it’s time to say goodbye.

Katie Honors, whom readers may remember from Sometimes I Grumblesquinch (2022), is back. This time, she explains that she is a “really brave kid.” She stands proudly “like a superhero,” climbs high on the playground, and needs to be checked on at night only once…or twice. She can even hold in her tears when it’s time to say goodbye at what looks like preschool…at first. Yum’s familiar and comforting colored pencil drawings portray the inner emotions that belie Katie’s brave front as she says, “Bye, I love you. See you soon,” her face radiating pure misery and the cheery yellow star on her T-shirt drooping. Sometimes, however, she can’t contain those feelings and she KAPLOOMS. With her eyes squeezed shut, she grabs her mother, lets out a roar, and radiates lightning and sparks. She becomes unable to hear the voices around her. Her mother initially asks her to be brave but then changes tactics, simply holding Katie and acknowledging that bravery and sadness, tears, and fear are not exclusive—that you can be “brave and KAPLOOMING” at the same time. Her loving actions model a healthy response for adults and also validate children’s feelings during this rite of passage. Katie and her mother have straight dark hair, light skin, and dark dots for eyes. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Comfort for both children and parents in an all-too-familiar situation. (author’s and illustrator’s notes) (Picture book. 3-7)

Thursday, February 16, 2023

PW review

 

Ode to a Bad Day

Chelsea Lin Wallace, illus. by Hyewon Yum. Chronicle, $16.99 (48p) ISBN 978-1-79721-080-3

Rather than glorifying a specific topic, these odes narrated by a schoolchild bewail myriad small annoyances that can accompany a bad day. In early lines by Wallace (A Home Named Walter), even the morning’s first moments presage trouble: “Oh Bad Morning,/ eyes are crusty, bones are rusty./ Why do all my teeth feel dusty?” Watercolor and colored pencil spreads from Yum (Luli and the Language of Tea) show the child, portrayed with light skin and black hair, frowning amid snarled-up bedclothes. The room’s stuffed animals, together with a visiting cricket, give the child a collective side-eye. Brilliant pinks and oranges offer heightened energy to Yum’s consistently engaging spreads, while sensory-focused lines list the indignities of the day: someone cutting in the racially diverse classroom’s line, a missing pudding cup at lunch, a spoiled art project, and more. Each individual annoyance may seem small on its own (“Oh Hiccup,/ you interrupt hiccup/ my play with Nick hiccup”), but the cumulative irritations make the day a total write-off—though not without some reflection (“I’m so annoyed.../ but not destroyed”) and the promise of a better tomorrow. Ages 5–8. Author’s agent: Jennifer Rofé, Andrea Brown Literary. Illustrator’s agent: Sean McCarthy, Sean McCarthy Literary. (Apr.)

Review from BCCB

 Trade ed. ISBN 9781797210803$16.99

Reviewed from digital galleysR4-7 yrs

A morning of soggy cereal and itchy clothes is just the start of our pouty protagonist’s misery, and the day doesn’t get much brighter from there. The youngster laments their troubles as a hurried rush to school results in a skinned knee, a case of the hiccups interrupts playtime, and a missing pudding cup ruins lunch. An afternoon errand trip makes for some especially dramatic woes: “Oh, Boredom,/ I thought you’d left. Bye-bye. Shoo-shoo!/ You’re back again with more nothing to do./ A chore at the store?/ I fall to the floor!/ Snorrrrrrrrrre.” Kiddo makes it through a yucky dinner and the ever-arduous bedtime prep, ending the day with a snuggle with their caretaker and a hope that perhaps tomorrow will be better. The poetic structure and regal cadence lend the child’s voice a sense of polite formality, bringing ironic humor to her bad day histrionics, but the joke does not necessarily come at the youngster’s expense. Rather, repetitive address of the day’s various disappointments (“Oh you Ouchy,” “Oh you Hiccup”) acknowledges the plain old awfulness of the situation. Illustrations have a childlike draftsmanship, with dot-eyed faces and scribbly linework in colored pencil and watercolor, and the misery of our put-upon protagonist, with a constant frown and occasional wide-mouthed moan, is cleverly matched with bits of visual humor, including an expressive little cricket that follows the child through their travails. The book ends with hard-earned wisdom that even adults could use: “All day long/ my way went wrong./ I’m annoyed . . . / but not destroyed.”  KQG

Monday, February 6, 2023

Ode to A Bad Day

 

  • ODE TO A BAD DAY

This is one bad day readers won’t mind reliving again and again.

ODE TO A BAD DAY

It’s only fitting that a day this bad gets its own lyrical poem.

“Oh you Bad Morning.” Right from the start, a child who presents as Asian with straight black hair, peachy skin, and dots for eyes can tell it’s going to be a bad day. On most double-page spreads, rhyming lines in irregular meter convey the sensibility and grandeur of the traditional ode, glorifying a different aspect of the bad day. The verso describes the outrage (“Oh Too Much Milk in My Cereal, / soggy, squishy! Boggy, mushy! / You turned my crispy into gushy!”), while the recto declaims the lament (“Oh you Too Much Milk”). It is impressive how many despairing, outraged, and sad expressions Yum is able to give the young protagonist as the day progresses through each indignity, including itchy clothes, being late, dealing with a line cutter, and getting the hiccups. One particularly poignant illustration sees the child prone on the floor of a supermarket with one knee raised: “Oh you Boredom.” Not every rhyme is perfect, but the overall sentiment comes through loud and clear, and Yum’s soft watercolor and colored pencil artwork is a wonderful foil for the negative feelings. This is especially true as the day draws to a close, a new day is within sight, and more hopeful thoughts take over. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

This is one bad day readers won’t mind reliving again and again. (Picture book. 4-8)

Monday, July 18, 2022

한겨레 기사:으르렁소아과

 

[책&생각] 이발소 안 가려던 첫째 사자, 어느새 컸어요

등록 2022-06-03 05:00  
수정 2022-06-03 09:55 
텍스트 크기 조정

염혜원 작가 ‘으르렁’ 두번째 얘기
이발소 이어 소아과 찾은 가족

두려움 다독이며 검진에 도전
주사 맞기 무섭다면 이 책 먼저

으르렁 소아과
염혜원 글·그림 l 창비 l 1만 3000원

아기가 태어나 세상으로 걸어 나오는 데는 몇 개의 동굴을 통과해야 할까. 아이들은 별별 괴물이 사는 동굴을 하나씩 통과하면서 한 뼘씩 자란다. ‘치과 동굴’에서는 이빨을 깨 먹는 충치 괴물을 물리치려 고막 찢는 울음으로 필사적 결투를 벌인다. ‘미용실 동굴’ 입구에서는 머리카락을 잘라 먹는 가위 괴물이 너무 무서워 도망치고만 싶다. 때론 뒷걸음치다 망태 할아버지한테 잡혀갈까 봐, 그 자리에 얼어붙어 엉엉 울고 만다.
말랑말랑한 내면을 단단하게 성장시키는 ‘두려움’이라는 감정. 아이의 근원적 두려움 앞에서 초보 양육자들도 어쩔 줄 몰라 하기 일쑤다. 사탕발림식 달래기 말고 묘수는 없을까.

염혜원 작가는 아이 마음속 두려움을 가만 들여다보고 다독이는 비법을 아는 듯하다. 이번에 펴낸 그림책 <으르렁 소아과>가 힌트를 준다. <으르렁 이발소>에 이은 ‘으르렁 시리즈’ 2편이다. ‘주사 맞기가 무서운 나의 친구들에게’란 추신이 붙었다.

걱정 많은 아빠 사자, 겁이 많지만 조금은 자라 우쭐해진 첫째, 아무것도 모르는 천진난만한 둘째의 병원 나들이를 앞두고, 집안의 공기는 잎사귀가 뾰족한 테이블야자 화분처럼 쭈뼛해진다. 아빠는 “넌 이제 다 컸어, 그렇지?” 아이 마음의 문을 똑똑 두드린다. 지난번 곰 선생님의 손가락을 물어버린 첫째가 이번에는 병원 검진을 무사히 잘 받을 수 있을지 걱정이 이만저만이 아닌데, “그럴 일 없다”며 첫째는 배짱을 부린다. 소아과 건강 검진이 처음인 동생한테 “걱정 마”라며 안심시킬 줄도 안다. <으르렁 이발소>에서 아빠 말을 듣지 않으려 했던 첫째가 어느새 컸다. 키재기, 시력검사를 어떻게 하는지 동생한테 알려주는 오빠를 믿어도 될까. 병원 검진의 마지막 관문, 예방 주사만 남았는데 …. 첫째는 동생 앞에서 시범을 잘 보일까.

볼로냐 라가치 상, 에즈라 잭 키츠 상 등을 받은 작가가 그려내는 세밀한 표정이 아이의 다층적 내면을 읽게 한다. 아빠는 아빠대로, 오빠는 오빠대로, 동생은 동생대로의 막연한 불안과 갈등 상황을 ‘함께라면 괜찮아’ 느낌의 따뜻함으로 녹여냈다. 함께 보면 크는 책이다. 4살 이상 .

권귀순 기자 gskwon@hani.co.kr, 그림 창비 제공

Monday, June 27, 2022

Booklist LION NEEDS A SHOT

 


Lion Needs a Shot.

By Hyewon Yum. Illus. by the author

May 2022. 40p. Abrams, $16.99 (9781419748295). PreS–Gr. 1 

In this charming follow-up to Lion Needs a Haircut (2020), Daddy Lion hesitantly tells cubs Luka and Lulu that it’s time to visit the doctor for a checkup. Luka, as the older sibling, explains what Lulu can expect during her first visit—having the doctor listen to her heart with stethoscope, getting measured, and (gulp!) getting a shot. Their appointment goes smoothly until Dr. Brown arrives with their shots, triggering Luka’s own fear and thoughts of escape, until he remembers he needs to be brave for Lulu. He takes his shot like a champ, and Lulu models his behavior, both of them earning stickers from Dr. Brown for being such good patients. Yum’s sweet illustrations are softly rendered in colored pencils, and their childlike quality is a perfect match for the story. It strikes a reassuring tone for little ones anxious about doctor visits or getting shots (“They keep you from getting sick! . . . [And] you get a really nice sticker.”), while also demonstrating a loving sibling relationship.

 

Tuesday, June 21, 2022

SLJ STARRED Review

 «SOMETIMES I GRUMBLESQUINCH by Rachel Vail; illus. by Hyewon Yum

40p. Scholastic. Jul. 2022. Tr $18.99. ISBN 9781338751161

 

PreS-Gr 2–Self-described “really nice kid” Katie Honors always aims to please. Polite, well-behaved, and flexible, she earns compliments from her parents: “Katie is such a pleasure.” The reality beneath this veneer of perfection, of course, is a range of emotions, positive and negative. Her toddler brother Chuck has a knack for provoking her in small ways that her mother and father either overlook or minimize with platitudes: “You don’t mind, do you?” and “Chuck loves you!” Since her appearance as the protagonist of Vail’s Sometimes I’m Bombaloo, Katie has learned to suppress her feelings by “grumblesquinching,” her idiosyncratic term for bottling up anger and sadness inside. After her pent-up frustration finally explodes in the form of a tantrum, she fears that she has irreparably damaged her parents’ opinion of her. To her relief, her mother responds not with judgment but with warm understanding—she is accepted, anger and all. Vail creates a strikingly honest portrait of family relationships, sensitively probing the all-too-common adult habit of using praise to avoid uncomfortable but necessary emotional dialogue. Yum’s bright, expressive colored pencil drawings cleverly externalize the progression of Katie’s emotional response: as she loses her composure, strands of her hair begin to float up into sinister tentacles, and the image on her shirt subtly shifts from a rainbow to a storm cloud. VERDICT This tender, insightful exploration of childhood emotion and respectful parenting is an important purchase for all collections.

–Jonah Dragan