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Little Mole’s Wish

Author

Kim Sangkeun

Publisher

SAKYEJUL PUBLISHING LTD.

Categories

Picture Books

Audience

3~5 years old

Overseas Licensing

Keywords

  • #Friendship
  • #innocence of childhood
  • #imagination
  • #first snow
  • #friend

Copyright Contact

Kang Hyunjoo

  • Publication Date

    2017-01-26
  • No. of pages

    52
  • ISBN

    9791160940046
  • Dimensions

    225 * 250
Overview

This book shows an innocent story that freely cross fantasy and reality on the day the first snow falls.

Book Intro

On the first snowy day of the year, the little mole, who is going home, meets a small white snowball. The little mole quietly speaks to the lump of snow. The lump of snow listens to him without words. The little mole waits for the bus to go home with his friend.

He naturally becomes friends with the lump of snow. At the same time, the children who are reading the book break down the boundary between reality and fantasy and enter the world of the little mole where the first snow has fallen.

When he says the snowball is his friend, the bear, the bus driver, says, “It’s just a snowball. It’ll melt anyway.” Listening to this, the little mole tactfully turns the snowball into what looks like a bear. But the fox, the next bus driver, looks at the bear-looking lump of snow and says, “A bear? Are you talking about that big lump of snow?” The little mole just thinks he should downsize his friend and does so.

At the center of the whole narrative, there is the little mole's faith that the snowball is his friend, from the beginning to the end. His faith communicates with the imagination of children who freely cross the boundary between fantasy and reality. The bear and the fox talk like adults in the real world, but rather than offering disappointment, they make the pure heart of the little mole stand out, so the reader learns what is inside.

Soon, the night comes. We now feel sorry for looking at the little mole and his friend still waiting for the bus in the snow. And a bus arrives. The deer driving the bus says, “Oh, dear, you are freezing.” He worries and tells them to get in. The deer is the only character who acknowledges the world of the little mole. He could be a metaphor for an adult who protects the world of a child. There is another adult who recognizes the world of the little mole. It is his grandmother who welcomes him at home. She, as always, carefully listens to him. The narrative in this picture book is completed when the stable adults who protect the world of the little mole are added to it. In fact, the imagination of a child grows richer when an adult participates in it because the child feels secure when the adult acknowledges his or her imaginary world.

About the Author

Kim Sangkeun



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