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< Picture Books Library
Little Parachutes Gold Star Winner
Categories: Acceptance & Inclusion, Confidence & Self-esteem, Courage, Disabilities, Friendship & Getting Along, Kindness, Resilience / adaptability

Squishy Sand

This engaging picture book features Leigh, a disabled child who uses a wheelchair. It highlights some of the everyday obstacles that wheelchair users have to cope with. A great choice for any child, reinforcing the importance of empathy, resilience, teamwork, kindness and creative thinking.
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Squishy Sand


Author: Charlene McIver
Illustrator: Caroline Keys
Publisher: Charlene McIver

Children living with disabilities should recognise aspects of their own lives in ‘Squishy Sand’. Realistically highlighting some of the everyday obstacles that children with limited mobility have to deal with, it gently acknowledges the frustration and limitations that they may experience in their own lives.

Friends Leigh, Cosmo and Tara are keen to take their dogs for a walk on the beach on a hot sunny day, but Leigh points out that his wheelchair won’t be able to get across the ‘squishy sand’. The trio dream up various inventive ways to overcome this challenge, and begin to gather together some discarded junk they find on the beach to make adaptations to Leigh’s wheelchair. Some of their early prototypes don’t perform as well as they had hoped, resulting in tips and wobbles, but they don’t give up.

Finally, old chunky car tyres placed over the wheels turns out to be the solution they are looking for: the wheelchair is transformed into a sand-friendly, seagull chasing ‘Monster Buggy’! The ‘racing crew’  launch Leigh from the top of the board walk. He is naturally apprehensive, but as he gathers speed across the sand he feels like he’s FLYING! The children take turns in the whizzy wheelchair, and see the funny side when Cosmo crash-lands, unharmed, into the soft sand. The friends have a brilliant, action-packed experience together, and Leigh is keen to come back the next day for even more fun.

As Duke Ellington once said, a problem is a chance for you to do your best. This delightful picture book is testamant to this. The ‘squishy sand’ referred to in the story begins as a restricting barrier for Leigh’s wheelchair and ends up as a soft landing for a fall, giving the friends confidence to try out some turbo-charged feats in their fantastic new invention.

Author Charlene McIver has created a story that retains its light-heartedness and sense of fun while at the same time delivering helpful and comforting messages. Leigh’s reliance on his friends is never understated, but he’s portrayed as being extremely capable (the story opens with a lovely double page spread showing Tara and Cosmo trailing behind him as he speeds along the road). Illustrator Caroline Keys has ably and naturally captured the moods and actions of the children, using beautiful delicate pencil drawings washed with watercolour.

This video link is provided to help an adult assess the book's suitability for a child's situation before purchasing it. It has been filmed by a third party and hosted on YouTube and is not made by Little Parachutes. More info

The messages we found in this book:

Acknowledgement:

  • Children living with disabilities can often be denied opportunities to take part in everyday activities due to lack of accessibility. It is difficult for Leigh to get onto the sand at the beach: something other children naturally take for granted.
  • Leigh is very nervous about falling out of his wheelchair and dwells on the possibility of injuring himself. He tells his friends he doesn’t mind waiting for them on the boardwalk, but it is clear that he is disappointed at the prospect of not being able to go with them onto the sand.
  • Leigh is full of ‘what ifs’, thinking ahead to worst-case scenarios, which is something that many children do when dealing with anxieties.

Guidance:

  • Wheelchair users can move fast. Leigh whizzes past his friends along the road. The author has used lots of words such as ‘turbo’, ‘zoom’, ‘speed’ and ‘whizz’ to reinforce this, describing Leigh’s friends as his ‘racing crew’.

Hope & Inspiration:

  • Using their combined optimism, teamwork and ingenuity, the friends are able to come up with a solution to the accessibility problem so they can have an energetic and enjoyable day on the beach.
  • Cosmo falls out of the wheelchair, but he isn’t hurt and manages to smile about it. He isn’t put off by the setback, and he gets back in the chair and carries on playing.
Worth noting:

The story was written as a dedication to the author’s late son, Leigh, whose life provided the inspiration for the story and the central character. Charlene is planning to publish further stories about Leigh’s adventures. You can find out more about her writing on her website.

Review by: Claire Ward-Dutton

Categories: Acceptance & Inclusion, Confidence & Self-esteem, Courage, Disabilities, Friendship & Getting Along, Kindness, Resilience / adaptability
Tags: anxiety, co-operation, confidence, courage, friends, independence, persistence, wheelchair



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What is a Parachute Book?

A challenging experience can make a young child feel as if they are in emotional free fall. As a parent, you can’t stop them falling, but you can offer them a softer landing:
a Parachute Book.

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