“Not everything that’s broken can be fixed.”
Lucy and her father must manage on their own, now, and Lucy loves to help Dad by fixing things. So when she finds a sparrow with a broken wing, she builds an airplane to help it fly. The plane breaks apart in flight; luckily, they’re rescued by an assortment of caring birds. By summer’s end, the sparrow is gone, but she still has her dad. McGeachin’s illustrations provide a poignant subtext for this moving debut, an Australian import. In the very first scenes, Lucy wears an orange scarf. It becomes a nest for the injured bird. The same scarf also appears early on in pictures on the wall of a woman readers will assume is Lucy’s mother. Toward the end, one is shown more fully. Her mother’s in a wheelchair, the three of them gathered close. Outside, the scarf flies away. Both bird and mother have gone. A final, hopeful spread shows Lucy and Dad putting up a birdhouse together. Under a birdbath there’s a stone with the bird’s name, Flap. This is the only scene in which the father smiles. The color palette is muted early on but brightens as the story progresses. Readers who enjoy detailed pictures will marvel at the household materials Lucy gathers to make her airplane and the range of helpful birds. (A final spread labels those birds and includes what to do if you find an injured bird.)
A gentle, effective presentation of grieving and moving on.
(Picture book. 3-8)