Sitting among blueberry bushes on a hillside overlooking her grandmother’s yellow house, a young girl remembers camping with her mother in the very same spot as a toddler.
From her perch, the girl can see her gramma at the yellow house’s kitchen window. Gramma is washing dishes and silently reminiscing about childhood days spent in her mother’s garden. As the girl’s mother (Gramma’s daughter) comes down the hill to fetch her, she, too, is lost in memories—of fun times spent sorting berries in the yellow house’s kitchen when she was younger. In this fashion, the narrative swings back and forth among the three characters, with the artwork alternating between grayscale spreads showing scenes from their interconnected memories and full-color spreads depicting the present. Readers watch the trio—and the grandmother’s cat—grow older; but, some things, comfortingly, never change. Wherever the characters are (literally or figuratively) in the here and now, the textual refrain points out that they are “also there,” meaning the intangible place where memories lie, untouched by the passage of time. Spare lines of imagistic text on each double-spread page poignantly capture brief moments in time, haikulike, and create a dreamy rhythm well suited to the nostalgic narrative. Goodale’s illustrations, executed on kitaka paper using monoprint, gouache, and (fittingly) blueberry ink, are gentle and quiet with a homespun feel. All characters are White.
A simple but profound meditation on memory and its power to foster continuity and connectedness.
(recipe) (Picture book. 4-7)