I read about Kobi Yamada and Mae Besom’s What Do You Do With An Idea? on one of those lists that all of us parents bump into somewhere or other on the internet. I checked it out from the library while we were on vacation and read it to the kids. They were delighted with the book and asked me to read it again. It could have been Mae Besom’s illustrations that caught them. Her careful introduction of color into charcoal pencil illustrations is certainly intriguing. Or maybe they just enjoyed watching the “idea”, rendered as an egg with legs and a golden crown, as it scampered over the pages. I can’t believe they understood the full weight of what Yamada was saying, however. That impact fell on me.
Yamada talks about the birth of an idea, about how it seems to come from nowhere, about how it follows you around uninvited. He talks about the fear of others seeing it, about the embarrassment of having an idea at all. He talks about what happens when we keep an idea tucked away, and about the very different result of giving it space to breathe and grow. He talks about its transformation, how an idea can change before your eyes and grow to encompass your world. He talks about how your idea grows beyond you until it is not merely yours, but a part of everything, something that belongs to everyone. Yamada says, and rightly, that an idea can change the world.
How I wish I had seen this book as a child! It is embarrassing to have an idea, easy to disregard it if others aren’t quick to see its value. But we share the mind of the Creator, and God is always at work in our imaginations, planting awkward little seeds that grow to be wonders.
What Do You Do With An Idea? may prove a great encouragement to you and your children. It may help you recognize and nurture the little gold-crowned eggs that turn up in your heads. The color and beauty of its final pages might buoy you over the fear of those tentative early steps. In the end, I hope you’ll unleash all those beautiful ideas on the world. We can’t wait to see what you have in mind.
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Marcia Lynch says
This story sounds like the story of my life! Have to order it asap.
Cheston Cooper says
I want to get my hands on this book! Thank you for recommending it. My kids have been hounding me for quite some time to write down my ideas and bring them to life.
Patty Sommer says
Looks lovely! Thanks for sharing, Helena. Amazing how those picture books are often written more for the mamas and daddies than the kiddos…..