"This book is innovative and useful as a way to talk about the idea of lossâwithout ever referring to actual death. Parents and educators can use this to talk with a child about how itâs normal to be sad and miss loved ones...Cheerful, brightly colored illustrations make this a fine choice to use with the youngest of audiences. Since death isnât directly specified, this title also works for when a childâs loved one is moving far away. An excellent vehicle to gently approach the topic of loss. Recommended for collections needing these types of materials."
School Library Journal
"A resonant, layered tale that will only gain in texture as its readers get older."
USA Today
<i>"Grandad's Island</i>Â by British author-illustrator Benji Davies (<i>The Storm Whale</i>; Bizzy Bear series) celebrates a close grandfather-grandson relationship with warmth and style. Whether it's read as a picture book about love, loss or just missing someone who isn't around anymore, it's a charmer. Cheerful cinematic spreads invite young readers into all sorts of intriguing places, from a cozy attic full of curiosities like a turtle teapot, to a vast ship's deck, to the deep jungle of an island paradise."
Shelf Awareness for Readers
"As with <i>The Storm Whale</i>, Davies offers a story of loneliness and togetherness distinguished by understated, deeply felt emotions and a nautical milieu."
Publishers Weekly
"Daviesâs elegantly rough illustrations, evoking a childâs paintings, tap into the imagination of death with little fuss, and his story declines to offer kids instruction on how to feel. Indeed, <i>Grandadâs Island</i>Â doesnât mention death at all, but is deeply in touch with the ways in which loss and abundance commingle in the mind, correcting and assuaging each other."
The New York Times Book Review
"Daviesâs elegantly rough illustrations, evoking a childâs paintings, tap into the imagination of death with little fuss, and his story declines to offer kids instruction on how to feel. Indeed, <i>Grandadâs Island</i>Â doesnât mention death at all, but is deeply in touch with the ways in which loss and abundance commingle in the mind, correcting and assuaging each other."
The New York Times Book Review
"The creator of <i>The Storm Whale </i>(2014) offers another thoughtful picture book guaranteed to spark discussion...Recommend to young families dealing with loss, especially those who prefer to gloss over the scientific realities."
Booklist Online