No. of pages 32
Published: 2016
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This book is the winner of numerous awards
This book has been graded for interest at 3-5 years.
There are 32 pages in this book.
This is a picture book. A picture book uses pictures and text to tell the story. The number of words varies from zero ('wordless') to around 1k over 32 pages. Picture books are typically aimed at young readers (age 3-6) but can also be aimed at older children (7+).
This book was published in 2016 by Walker Books Ltd .
Jonarno Lawson is a poet and the author of several books for children. He lives in Toronto, Ontario. Sydney Smith has illustrated multiple children's books, including Town is by the Sea, the winner of the 2017 Kate Greenaway Medal, The White Cat and the Monk, written by Jo Ellen Bogart, and the acclaimed Footpath Flowers, which was a New York Times Children's Book of the Year and a winner of the Governor General Award for Illustration. Born in Nova Scotia in Canada, Sydney now lives in Toronto with his wife and son. Find him online at hutten. org/sydney and on Twitter and Instagram as @sydneydraws.
This book has been nominated for the following awards:
Alcuin Society Design Award - Excellence in Book Design
This book was recognised in the Excellence In Book Design category of the Alcuin Society Design Award.
Ola Forest of Reading Elizabeth Mrazik-Cleaver Award - Canadian Picture Book
This book was recognised in the Canadian Picture Book category of the Ola Forest Of Reading Elizabeth Mrazik-Cleaver Award.
Governor General's Literary Award - Illustrated
This book was recognised in the Illustrated category by the Governor General's Literary Award.
Amelia Frances Howard-Gibbon Award - Best Illustrator
This book was recognised in the Best Illustrator category of the Amelia Frances Howard-Gibbon Award.
Gelett Burgess Award - Book Of the Year
This book was recognised in the Book Of The Year category of the Gelett Burgess Award.
This beautiful, touching book looks through the eyes of a child whose innocent delight at the world brings a sense of childlike wonder into every day life. -- Alan Nolan * Inis *
Footpath Flowers is a superb wordless book; its quiet beauty, its narrative full of unassuming grace will fill its readers with a real sense of wonder and yearning for those fleeting voiceless moments of perfection. -- Library Mice * Library Mice *
It's a powerful reminder of the importance of appreciating our surroundings and the mutual gift of giving - two lessons which you certainly want your child to learn. -- Junior * Junior *
Full of poignancy, this is a book to revisit and to cherish. -- Jill Bennet * Red Reading Hub *
This is an unusual and delightful book which will give the adult and small person of five or six lots to talk about as they go through the pages. -- Newbury Weekly News * Newbury Weekly News *
This is [a] book to look at over [and over] again - there are new discoveries every time. -- Independent Bookshop Week supplement * The Guardian *
"...this is an anthem for kindness, for beauty in unlikely places and for the things a child seas that adults don't. -- Nicolette Jones * The Sunday Times *
Footpath Flowers is a beautiful book that retains its simplicity whilst also conveying a powerful message. * Armadillo Magazine *
There is a thoughtful quality to this wordless, mostly black and white picture book, the gentle story of a little girl picking wild flowers on a walk home with her father [...] There's much to discuss around this story, which has a pleasingly reflective tone and a fine-tuned feeling that all is good in the world. * The Guardian *
another exquisite wordless book for children, conveying with simple images and colours, the importance of noticing the beauty in everyday unlikely places. Like the Man with the Violin, it is an ode to the wonder of childhood and the importance of seeing beauty in places others may not. * Culture Baby *
"Footpath Flowers by JonArno Lawson & Sydney Smith is a silent gem. [...] The story is delightful and told in easy-to-read graphic novel style." * Irish Times, Children's Books of the Year recommended by Marie-Louise Fitzpatrick *
"Emphasising the importance of small acts of kindness as well as seeing the beauty in the everyday, the little girl suggests how we can change the world through paying closer attention to our environment and community." * Amnesty.org.uk *