Every morning, Filbert and Sacramento’s cockerel went up the bell tower and sang: “O sole mío…” It was like that for many years, so many it seemed it was always going to be so. However, the cockerel was getting old and one night he closed his eyes to go to sleep…
Death is a difficult concept for young children to understand and for adults to explain. The last crow explains it in an affectionate way, as one of life’s natural processes: an irreversible, universal and unavoidable ending for everyone.
The book tackles the different stages, affectively, of facing up to the loss of someone: mourning, acceptance and, finally, the beautiful legacy of the memories achieved without losing the narrative tension, emotion and evocative spaces. This way, it helps the youngest to come to terms with death in a useful way, to reflect on life and to value all the good times.
On a parallel and symbolically, the story has a bearing on the importance of transmitting knowledge as a key role in maturing and advancing towards emotional growth.
These concepts and values are made stronger through the interesting perspectives and fantastic pictorial compositions by Ángel Díez who has created for this album, through connotations, anthropomorphically, very elaborate characters.
Ficha técnica
Ilustrador: Miguel Angel Diez Navarro
Editorial: Oqo Editora
ISBN: 9788498711851
Idioma: Inglés
Número de páginas: 40
Encuadernación: Tapa dura
Fecha de lanzamiento: 21/05/2010
Año de edición: 2010
Plaza de edición: Es
Colección:
colección O
colección O
Alto: 23.0 cm
Ancho: 25.0 cm
Especificaciones del producto
Escrito por Pablo Albo
Pablo Pérez Antón, Pablo Albo, es cuentista de profesión. Y como las historias que cuenta, son de su autoría, a veces terminan en libros. Tiene más de 50 publicados. Se le puede leer (o tocar que también está en braille) en chino, coreano, árabe, alemán, euskera…