Jump inside the imagination of one unforgettable "Mummy" whose charge – William – needs lots of care and attention. "Mummy" is in fact William's little girl, and William is the real parent. Children will adore following along as she turns the tables on William, but always sees his potential "when he grows up" – he could be an astronaut or a lion tamer or a famous chocolate maker, but his most important job is being her Dad. (And possibly being an astronaut, if she can come too.)
Eve Coy is a freelance illustrator and animator. She is the creator of Looking After William and The Huffalots. Eve Coy lives in the Cotswolds, England.
It's very easy for me to become a little cocky when it comes to reading children's books. I read a lot of them, and when you read a lot of anything, you become familiar to the tips and tricks that such books use. You become wise to how they do what they do, and to be frank? Sometimes you become a little bit blind. Sometimes it's easy to read something not for what it is, but for what you think it is. It's a trend that I'm increasingly aware of within myself and so I am thrilled and delighted by those books that challenge my preconceptions. That rear, perhaps, out of the paths that I have chosen for them and ask me to consider them anew and with fresh, eager eyes.
Looking After William is a perfect little book and I adored it. It's told very simply, often pairing a clean sentence with a vibrant and rich double page spread, and it has this sort of timeless, rich taste to it. A lot of this is due to Coy's quietly confident language, but also the rich, unfinished edge of her artwork. These illustrations sing with unfinished energy and movement; they're part of the tapestry of this life, and rich with an almost infinite sense of potential. She's not afraid of the more abstract edge either, pairing a lion tamer scene with an astronaut, and linking the two through some smart visual clues. There's also a delightful hidden thread throughout the book, with the cat, and some thickly gorgeous endpapers.
I love books like this, because they speak. They speak out and loud and proud about what they are and this is a book about love. It's the story of William and his Mummy; but, is in fact, told from the child's point of view. It's such a subtle and clever way to flip the story, and it's one that will leave the parents nodding sympathetically at William's exhaustion and children delighting in being in control. Books like this are good, you know? They work. They remind me what is good and right with the world.
It appears this book has also been published under the name Daddy-sitting and I reckon the new name (Looking After William) is better as it introduces and element of who's who? It's a really nice portrayal of what seems to be a stay at home dad - kinda makes me wish I could do that more often!