Luke's Way of Looking
By (Author) Nadia Wheatley
Illustrated by Matt Ottley
Walker Books Australia
Walker Books Australia
1st June 2012
Australia
Children
Fiction
A823.00
Paperback
40
Width 240mm, Height 240mm
216g
All the boys in Luke's class see things the same way - except for Luke, who has his own special way of looking. Luke feels as if he doesn't fit in. And then one day he discovers a place that feels like home. Suddenly, the whole world changes.
...this is a poignant story with strong themes of a boy who sees the world differently and expresses it through his artMatt Ottley has captured the essence of the text, and through his illustrations we can feel the emotions the boy and the teacher are feeling. Its colour-filled covers depict Luke joyously liberated and swinging from a tree branch amidst his abstract art. * Buzzwords Magazine *
Nadia Wheatley began writing full-time in 1976, after completing postgraduate work in Australian history. She writes non-fiction and fiction, for both adults and children. Her picture book My Place, illustrated by Donna Rawlins, was the Childrens Book Council of Australia Book of the Year for Younger Readers in 1988 and has recently been produced as a 26-part television series. Seven other books by Nadia Wheatley have been honoured in the CBCA awards, including Lukes Way of Looking.
Matt Ottley is a multi-award-winning picture book writer and illustrator. He spent his childhood in Papua New Guinea, and has travelled widely throughout Australia and the world. He worked for some years as a stockman on remote cattle stations in the Australian outback, then went on to study fine arts and music at college and university. He lived for three years in Britain where he worked as an equestrian painter. His controversial book and musical work for young adults, Requiem for a Beast was awarded the Childrens Book Council of Australias Picture Book of the Year in 2008, and the Queensland Premiers Award for Young Adult Literature in the same year. Matts work has been translated into many languages and his picture book What Faust Saw was an international bestseller. Matt continues to work as an author, illustrator and composer.