A young boat ventures off while a nurturing lighthouse worries and waits.
Perched in an idyllic harbor, Lighthouse keeps a watchful eye over all the ships that pass by. Along comes a young boat named Brightness, and Lighthouse has all the more reason to glow as she watches out for the newcomer. After a summer of testing nearby waters in the harbor, Brightness disappears, much to Lighthouse’s dismay. Seasons pass, and on a stormy night, Brightness finally returns, and Lighthouse guides the boat back to safety. “Even after I left you to see the whole wide world…you led me back home,” says Brightness. “That’s as it should be,” responds Lighthouse. Mantle’s illustrations are rich with bright nautical tones; characters are lightly anthropomorphized. Some scenes evoke emotion, especially the one depicting the thrashing, stormy waves, set against a vicious-looking night sky. Rich vocabulary (“rusty trawlers and stately sloops, crusty shrimpers”) might intrigue boat enthusiasts. Overall, though, the text is a bit wordy, and the story drags. Readers never find out where Brightness goes all autumn—a missed opportunity to add some drama or complexity to the narrative. Lighthouse serves only to support and calm her community; it’s a one-dimensional portrayal of caregiving, in the vein of Shel Silverstein’s The Giving Tree (1964) and other stories across the kid-lit canon.
Sweet but underwhelming.
(Picture book. 4-8)