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< Picture Books Library
Categories: Acceptance & Inclusion, Anxiety, Being Different & Being Yourself, Confidence & Self-esteem, Feelings, Resilience / adaptability, Sadness

I Talk Like A River

A moving book about how it feels to have a stutter and have difficulty expressing yourself.
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I Talk Like A River

Author: Jordan Scott
Illustrator: Sydney Smith
Publisher: Walker Books

“I talk like a river.”

“Even the river stutters. Like I do.”

The boy in this story has days when he struggles to speak – a bad speech day.  When he wakes in the morning he can see and hear the sounds but he can’t say them at all.  It gets worse when he goes to school because he dreads the teacher asking him a question in class.  Then he knows everyone will turn and look at him and it will make it even harder to speak.  Worse still is the fact that the other children giggle and laugh at the sounds he makes.  One morning his teacher asks the children to give a speech about their favourite place and he knows this will be the hardest thing of all.  After school his dad takes him down to his favourite place – the river.  He thinks about his bad speech day and cries.  His Dad hugs him and tells him “You talk like the river”.  The boy takes strength from this and begins to use the idea of the river and the different ways it moves (bubbling, churning, crashing or smooth and calm) to help him speak. The next day he is ready to tell his teacher all about the river.

The words in the book are very articulate but the reader is aware that the boy cannot say them. I liked the gentleness and calmness of the book and the way it portrays the natural world around us.  The illustrations are varied, with some clear and some more abstract – they show how the boy is feeling in how they change.  It tells us that what we see and hear of people is only the surface, and we shouldn’t be too quick to laugh or judge because, like a river, people have hidden depths.

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:

  • Going to school and speaking out loud can be challenging for some children: Not everybody enjoys or is good at the same things at school.
  • It is sometimes difficult to admit that you’re scared of something.  The boy has a place he can go to which helps him feel better and a Dad he can talk to. 
  • It is difficult to be different and upsetting when people laugh unkindly at you.

Guidance:

  • It is easy to feel like no one understands you and it can be hard to ask for help; The boy finds a trusted adult who can help him.

Hope & Inspiration:

  • The phrase his Dad says to him becomes his mantra and helps him; I talk like a river.
  • The boy’s dad is kind and supportive. The boy will find friends at school who will also support him.
  • The boy shows new-found courage and confidence to overcome his fear of speaking at school.
Worth noting:

For children aged 6+ because there are quite a lot of words.

Review by: Hannah Fazakerley

Categories: Acceptance & Inclusion, Anxiety, Being Different & Being Yourself, Confidence & Self-esteem, Feelings, Resilience / adaptability, Sadness
Tags: anxiety, confidence, feelings, persistence, prejudice, verbal bullying



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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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