Kirkus Reviews QR Code
IT'S MY TREE by Olivier Tallec

IT'S MY TREE

by Olivier Tallec ; illustrated by Olivier Tallec ; translated by Yvette Ghione

Pub Date: Sept. 1st, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-5253-0547-4
Publisher: Kids Can

A meditation on the perils of possessiveness.

In what is not so much a story as an open-ended discussion starter, a solitary squirrel stakes a claim—“It’s MY tree and these are MY pinecones”—and then whirls off on a round of imaginary what-ifs. Having first contemplated the prospect of being challenged for ownership and then the notion that there just might be enough shade and pine cones to share (“But we all know where that kind of thinking leads”), the squirrel proceeds to envision ways to reinforce its property rights…maybe by building a wall (nothing topical to see here, oh no). In the illustrations, the bucolic setting is transformed into a mental landscape dominated by a towering wall that stretches off into the distance to leave squirrel and tree alone in stark isolation. Thinking that there might be more trees or bigger pine cones to claim on the other side, the squirrel scampers to the top of the wall—and in a wordless final scene is left staring at a crowded woodland aswarm with other squirrels. Readers may be left feeling cast adrift, particularly as the plotline comes off as, at best, thin next to flavorsome explorations of the theme like Jeff Mack’s Mine! (2017), Alex Willmore’s It’s My Sausage (2020), or Tallec’s own (as illustrator) How Selfish! written by Clare Helen Welsh (2020). (This book was reviewed digitally with 11-by-16-inch double-page spreads viewed at 42% of actual size.)

Food for thought, though the portions are larger and tastier elsewhere.

(Picture book. 6-8)