🎉   Please check out our new website over at books-etc.com.

Seller
Your price
£7.99
Out of Stock

The Colour of Home

By (author) Mary Hoffman
Illustrated by Karin Littlewood
Format: Paperback / softback
Publisher: Quarto Publishing PLC, United Kingdom
Imprint: Frances Lincoln Children's Books
Published: 1st Mar 2003
Dimensions: w 187mm h 268mm d 4mm
Weight: 160g
Interest age: From 6 to 9 years
ISBN-10: 0711219915
ISBN-13: 9780711219915
Barcode No: 9780711219915
Trade or Institutional customer? Contact us about large order quotes.
Synopsis
Hassan feels out of place in a new cold, grey country. At school, he paints a picture showing his colourful Somalian home, covered with the harsh colours of war from which his family has fled. He tells his teacher about their voyage from Mogadishu to Mombasa, then to the refugee camp and on to England. But gradually things change. When Hassan's parents put up his next picture on the wall, Hassan notices the maroon prayer mat, a bright green cushion and his sister Naima's pink dress - the new colours of home.

New & Used

Seller Information Condition Price
-New
Out of Stock

What Reviewers Are Saying

Submit your review
Newspapers & Magazines
This is a warm, ultimately hopeful story about the world of a refugee child, and the compassion and understanding shown to him by his teachers and schoolmates. || This book was published three years ago in 2002, but it is quite simply a masterpiece of the picture-book form and cannot be recommended too often or too highly. Mary Hoffman' s beautiful and sensitively told story concerns Hassan from Somalia, whose very real tale is trapped inside him with no way to be let out. The manner in which a picture has to be done in class and the revelations it causes is heartrending. Be warned, experience the book alone first before sharing it with youngsters. Many teachers and librarians have found themselves reduced to tears when first meeting the words and pictures here. || A thoughtful text and pictures which show the contrasts in his life vividly trace Hassan' s journey towards integration as he gradually leaves behind the violence he has escaped from and begins to embrace his new world.