Cow

A guest post by Trudy, 30-something-year-old first-time mum to Oscar, 16 months.

You think you’ve had a cow of day, but have you really? Have you ever really thought what a cow might go through during the day? Nor had I until our most recent purchase. I know, yet another animal book to add to Oscar’s already furry and feathered bookshelf.

We were out last week with Grandma (country Grandma as opposed to city Nanna!) and visited our favourite local bookstore, Book Bonding. I saw two sets of big brown eyes looking from the book display and it was too much for me to resist so we purchased Cow by Malachy Doyle and illustrated by Angelo Rinaldi. The front cover in it’s own right hit the right cord with me. When we were at the counter ready to pay, Natasha showed me Malachy’s latest book as well, Horse. Needless to say Grandma reached into her purse and we walked out with another two animal books.

The illustrations in this book are amazing. It’s as if the cows are in your living room. I felt as if I could reach out and pat their fur or feel the steam coming out of their mouths on the cold morning as they made their way to the milking shed. I have included a couple of illustrations from the book so you can appreciate the expertise of Angelo Rinaldi. You can actually see veins on the udder of the cow and could only imagine the milk sloshing around inside and the pain she must be experiencing prior to milking.

It will be a great book as Oscar gets older so we can teach him that milk doesn’t come out of cartons and teach him the process of getting the milk from the cow to the dairy. He can also get an understanding of what it might be like to be a cow. For the first time in my life I sat back and thought too what it must be like in the paddocks at night, on a dewy morning or during the heat of a summer’s day.

“Slowly you rise from the sodden grass, your thick coat wet with morning dew. Big and heavy, you amble to the gate, full udder swinging between your legs”.

The journey is amazing although simplistic in its own right. I was totally encapsulated in the experience and even as I write this blog I am still touched by those big brown eyes.

The trip to the milking shed, the trip back to the paddock and what a cow would experience during the day. Watching the children leave for school and return on the school bus. How the children swim in the river as the cow sits on the banks watching.

“As the midday sun blazes, you rest in the shade of the oak tree, and close your deep dark eyes. Your ears twitch to clear the flies from your face. You swish them from your back with your long bushy tail……”

From now on I will choose my words carefully before I state that I’ve had a cow of day….

“You’re back in the field, the sun has gone, the files have flown and the long, hot day draws to an end. You graze. You chew. And you rest. It’s hard work being a cow……..”

Alison Lester

Like Sarah I also have Alison Lester as one of my favourite author/illustrators.

Her stunning art as well as her very personal, funny and warm stories are pure magic. Before Ned was even born (he was in my tummy) I went to see Alison at a signing at Readings and she signed a copy of Are We There Yet?\"\"Are We There Yet? for him.

It says, “For Ned, happy travels and best wishes, from Alison Lester”. I’m sure that he is going to love Are We There Yet? when he is old enough and I really hope that one day he and his dad and I can take a trip around Australia just like in the story.

Books Illustrated in Middle Park have beautiful limited edition prints of Alison’s art for sale that would be perfect for a child’s room or a family room.

My Favourite Author…

A guest post by Sarah, 38 year old mum to Neve (9 3/4), Cissy (3) and Jemima (10 months).

I think my favourite author would have to be Alison Lester. I love the Australian-ness of her books, the gentle stories and illustrations and the fact that the substantial nature of them kind of creeps up on you. These books are “worthy” without boasting about it. My kids love them too.

Alison Lester grew up on a farm near Wilson’s Prom in Victoria, riding horses, spending time at the beach and her stories really reflect this upbringing. Alison herself says that she thinks what is appealing about her books is that they are “filled with the spirit of the young”. I think she captures this so beautifully. Her characters are adventurous and not afraid to be who they are – great qualities!

Some of our favourites include:

Imagine (for ages 2-5)

“Imagine if we were….” and be transported to other worlds. Every second page opens up to a double spread of other places. Filled with animals of every variety (listed around the outside so you can play an animal version of Where’s Wally).

“Imagine if we were surrounded by monsters where pteradons swoop and triceratops smash where stegosaurs stomp and tyrannosaurs gnash”. Turn the page and you are there. You can also go to the jungle, savannah, Antarctic, a farm, under the sea and the Australian Bush. This book converted me and I’ve been a fan ever since.

My Farm (for ages 4-7)

Inscribed at the front, “to Mum and Dad for a wonderful childhood”.

This book is told in seasons – and includes all the happenings on the farm. Alison takes us to the local show; she rescues a baby wombat, feeds the cows, and musters cattle along the beach. I imagine these events to be highlights of Alison’s own childhood and I end up feeling quite nostalgic for a more innocent time and place. The children in this story have such great adventures – it really is a window into quite a different life than the one of our urban children.

“In September it was time to bring the cattle home from the bush run. That year, Jake and I were finally old enough to go along. It took a day to ride down and muster, and a day to drive them home along the beach. We splashed through the shallows and jumped the waves. I decided to be a drover when I grow up.”

There is a bit more text in this one, so you probably need to be a bit bigger to appreciate it fully.

Ernie Dances to the Didgeridoo (for ages 3-7)

“Ernie is going to live in Arnhem Land for a year. His parents are working in a hospital there.”

It’s a new take on the other Tessa, Clive, Frank, Rosie books, with Ernie in Arnhem Land. I think this book is so delightful because in pointing out the cultural differences between us it manages to reinforce the fact that children are the same no matter what their culture.

I absolutely love the pages about the school play.

This book came about following Alison Lester’s own journey to Arnhem Land.

Are We There Yet? (for ages 4-7)

This book follows the travels of a family in a caravan travelling around Australia. Every second page has a map showing where they are and how far they have gone. They visit all the places you expect but it is not just a tourist guide. The book is filled with little vignettes of the experience – caravan park showers, where they sat in the car, playing monopoly in the caravan when it rained and the catch cry of younger brother Billy…. “Are we there yet?”

I’m Green and I’m Grumpy (for ages 18 months – 4)

In this story everyone hides in the cupboard, and there is a rhyming clue to guess what each character is dressed up as. “I’m green and I’m grumpy, I’m huge and I roar. I’m a thundering, rumbling…. (open the flap) DINOSAUR!“, finishing up with Rosie – a bit younger than we see her in Rosie Sips Spiders – asleep in the cupboard. Very sweet.

So if you haven’t visited Alison Lester’s books before, check them out at the library when you next visit – I’m sure you will love them as much as I do.